Editorial: NGOs on the road safety frontline
This UN Global Road Safety Week, NGOs have been at the forefront of
community-led advocacy, bridging the gap between policy (or lack of it)
and realities people face every day. Using Mobility Snapshots, they have
collected data that shows what it’s like to cross the road outside a
school, walk to the bus stop with no footpath, or to pick up groceries
from the local market—places where walking and cycling are common and
necessary.
They have shown how people’s journeys are made difficult and dangerous
by fast-moving traffic, lack of safe and convenient crossings, and
blocked or missing footpaths. These are major clues that people who walk
and cycle have been invisible to those who design, build, and legislate
our streets.
As well as documenting the issues, they are using the data to challenge
mindsets: of road users, who have accepted unsafe streets as normal and
inevitable, and of decision makers, to put people who walk and cycle
into the spotlight. During the campaign week, NGOs have empowered
children to demand routes to school, organized car-free street events
and processions to visualize streets designed for people, and led guided
community audits and Mobility Snapshots to point out simple,
evidence-based solutions that can transform streets for safe walking and
cycling.
For NGOs on the frontline of road safety, the UN Global Road Safety Week
isn’t a standalone campaign. It is a visible key moment in their
ongoing advocacy to bring attention to dangerous realities and
people-centered, evidence-based solutions.
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