Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Quantifying Accidents: Cars, Statistics, and Unintended Consequences in the Construction of Social Problems Over Time

  • Published:
Qualitative Sociology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

This paper investigates the potential effects of a single cultural means of claimsmaking—quantification—on the construction of a social problem through time. By analyzing salient historical uses of statistics in public debates on traffic accidents in the United States, the study seeks to advance the understanding of the role played by numerical claims in the broader dynamics of problem evolution and development. Specifically, key employments of numbers by early automobile clubs, the private insurance industry, safety movement and establishment, and printed media are closely traced and interrelated to flesh out their impacts on dominant representations of the issue over the long term. While numerical claimsmaking produced divergent, often contradictory effects on the construction of the problem, I argue that figures ultimately contributed to the gradual waning of the moralist and political zest that characterized much of the claimsmaking activities on the issue in the first half of the twentieth century. The argument provides one explanation of how traffic accidents can come to be defined in contemporary society as a “necessary evil”—a regrettable yet largely unalterable price to pay for the benefits of the automobile. To the extent that many of these quantification effects are unintended, they are linked to both the nature of statistical argumentation employed in this case and its institutional contexts.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig. 1

Similar content being viewed by others

Notes

  1. Since contextual-constructionism assumes that social problems acquire meaning in particular contexts and historical contingencies, the analyst taking this positing implicitly agrees that the social construct can be assessed against some objective reality. For more on this position see the works of Manis (1974, 1976).

  2. The breakdown of editorials per decade is: 1900-1909 = 16, 1910-1919 = 21, 1920-1929 = 68, 1930-1939 = 51, 1940-1949 = 68, 1950-1959 = 68, 1960-1969 = 33, 1970-1979 = 19, 1980-1989 = 17.

  3. The term “automobility,” which refers to the socio-technical system of the automobile, will be used throughout the paper. While the word has generated a number of definitions (see Seiler 2008, 4–6), it is usually understood as the material (cars, fuel, roads, concrete, asphalt), ideological (freedom, progress, individualism, power), and experiential (speed, thrill, control) apparatus that encompasses, and is reproduced by, the automobile. By adopting this term the article makes clear its focus on the relation of statistics to all motorized road traffic (i.e., private cars, buses, taxis, trucks). While I am aware of important nuances between these various means of transport in producing a different kind of sociability and experience (for example, private vs. public transport) (on these distinctions see the recent edited volumes by Miller 2001; Featherstone et al. 2005; Conley and Tigar McLaren 2009), accounting for these differences in terms of the impact of numbers is beyond the scope of this article as my central concern is with the effects of quantification within the uniform logics created by the system of automobility. These include official and informal “rules of the road,” binding infrastructures of roads and fuels, the social organization of space that promotes motor vehicle use, the ideology of the motor vehicle, and the subjectivities engendered through automobility. Indeed, as Packer (2008) has demonstrated nicely, although motorcyclist, truckers, and hitchhikers experience motoring in different ways, what they have in common is being singled out, in one historical moment or another, as posing a threat to the order of the road and thus requiring certain kinds of social control. Additionally, claimsmakers I analyzed here usually did not make distinctions between various kinds of motor vehicles, but instead talked of “traffic accidents,” “automobile accidents,” “death on the highway” and other general categories.

  4. For one, private underwriters supplied a considerable bulk of statistics for much of the NSC’s forecasts as many of its projections drew from life tables generated by corporate insurers. On the personal level, prominent NSC experts who as head of the statistics division in the 1920s and 1930s initiated the organization’s routine of predictions, held at the same time leading positions as statisticians in private insurance companies. The two were Frederick Crum from Prudential and Louis Dublin from Metropolitan Life Insurance.

  5. While every American president from the 1920s onward had treated accidents as an urgent national crisis and either convened federal conferences to address the problem or discussed it in a national speech, those who came after Lyndon Johnson have not framed the issue in such terms.

  6. This trend runs in contrast to the structural critiques of automobile use in environmental discourse. While in ecological circles the cost of the car focuses on its broader unsustainable consequences such as pollution and climate change, inefficient land use, economic disparities and access to cars, and community breakdown, death and injury as a result of traffic accidents is not typically considered an “environmental” problem, but one of “safety.” And while ecological movements have often advanced more radical alternatives to harmful technologies, safety discourse has opted for technological fixes within the existing systems (more on this see Conley and Tigar McLaren 2009, 6).

References

  • Adorjan, Michael. 2011. The lens of victim contests and youth crime stat wars. Symbolic Interaction 34(4): 552–573.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Altheide, David. 1987. Ethnographic content analysis. Qualitative Sociology 10(1): 65–77.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Arthurs, Jane, and Iain Grant (eds.). 2003. Crash cultures: Modernity, mediation, and the material. Portland: Intellect Books.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bartlett, Dean, and Sheila Payne. 1997. Grounded theory: Its basis, rationale, and procedures. In Understanding social research: Perspectives on methodology and practice, ed. George McKenzie, Jackie Powell, and Robin Usher, 175–195. London: Falmer Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bauman, Zygmunt. 1997. Postmodernity and its discontents. Cambridge: Polity Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bauman, Zygmunt. 2002. Society under siege. Cambridge: Polity Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Beckman, Karen. 2010. Crash: Cinema and the politics of speed and stasis. Durham: Duke University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Best, Joel. 1988. Missing children, misleading statistics. The Public Interest 92: 84–92.

    Google Scholar 

  • Best, Joel. 1990. Threatened children: Rhetoric and concern about child-victims. Chicago: University of hicago Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Best, Joel. 1995. Constructionism in context. In In Images of issues: Typifying contemporary social problems, ed. Joel Best, 337–354. New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.

    Google Scholar 

  • Best, Joel. 2001. Damned lies and statistics: Untangling numbers from the media, politicians, and activists. Berkeley: University of California Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Best, Amy. 2008. Teen driving as public drama: statistics, risk, and the social construction of youth as a public problem. Journal of Youth Studies 11(6): 651–669.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Blanke, David. 2007. Hell on wheels: The promise and peril of America’s car culture, 1900–1940. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.

    Google Scholar 

  • Blumer, Herbert. 1971. Social problems as collective behavior. Social Problems 18(3): 298–306.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 1999. Achievements in public health, 1900–1999: motor-vehicle safety – a 20th century public health achievement. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 48(18): 369–374.

    Google Scholar 

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 2012. WISQARS (Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System). U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. http://www.cdc.gov/injury/wisqars. Accessed June 26, 2012

  • Chrysler, Walter. 1927. The only cure for auto accidents. Outlook, April 27: 533.

    Google Scholar 

  • Clarke, Lee. 1999. Mission improbable: Using fantasy documents to tame disaster. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cohen, Stanley. 1972. Folk devils and moral panics: The creation of the mods and rockers. London: MacGibbon and Kee.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cohen Cline, Patricia. 1981. Statistics and the state: changing social thought and the emergence of a quantitative mentality in america, 1790 to 1820. The William and Mary Quarterly 38(1): 35–55.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Conley, Jim, and Arlene Tigar McLaren (eds.). 2009. Car troubles: Critical studies in automobility and auto-mobility. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing.

    Google Scholar 

  • Coveleski, Mark, and Mark Dirsmith. 1988. An institutional perspective on the rise, social transformation, and fall of a university budget category. Administrative Science Quarterly 33: 562–587.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cuff, Robert. 1989. Creating control systems: Edwin F. Gay and the central bureau of planning and statistics, 1917–1919. Business History Review 63(3): 588–613.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Daldy, Cyril. 1932. Irritate them if you want their attention. National Safety News 26(3): 66.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dauvergne, Peter. 2005. Dying of consumption: accidents or sacrifices of global morality? Global Environmental Politics 5(3): 35–47.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • DiMaggio, Paul, and Walter Powell. 1983. The iron cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields. American Sociological Review 48: 147–160.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Douglas, Mary. 1992. Risk and blame: Essays in cultural theory. London: Routledge.

    Google Scholar 

  • Espeland, Wendy. 2001. Commensuration and cognition. In Cognition in mind, ed. Karen Cerulo, 63–88. New York: Routledge.

    Google Scholar 

  • Espeland, Wendy, and Michael Sauder. 2007. Rankings and reactivity: how public measures recreate social worlds. American Journal of Sociology 113(1): 1–40.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Espeland, Wendy, and Mitchell Stevens. 1998. Commensuration as a social process. Annual Review of Sociology 24: 313–343.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Espeland, Wendy, and Mitchell Stevens. 2009. A sociology of quantification. European Journal of Sociology 49(3): 401–436.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ewald, Francois. 1991. Insurance and risk. In The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality – With Two Lectures by and an Interview with Michel Foucault, ed. Graham Burchell, Colin Gordon, and Peter Miller, 197–210. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Featherstone, Mike, Nigel Thrift, and John Urry (eds.). 2005. Automobilities. London: Sage.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ferrell, Jeff. 2002. Speed kills. Critical Criminology 11: 185–198.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Flink, James. 1970. America adopts the automobile, 1895–1910. Cambridge: MIT Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Flink, James. 1975. The car culture. Cambridge: MIT Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Fombrun, Charles, and Mark Shanley. 1990. What’s in a name? reputation building and corporate strategy. Academy of Management Journal 33: 233–258.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Forstorp, Per-Anders. 2006. Quantifying automobility: speed, ‘zero-tolerance’, and democracy. The Sociological Review 54(1): 93–112.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Foucault, Michel. 1977. Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison. New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

    Google Scholar 

  • Freund, Peter, and George Martin. 1993. The ecology of the automobile. New York: Black Rose Books.

    Google Scholar 

  • Freund, Peter, and George Martin. 1997. Speaking about accidents: the ideology of auto safety. Health 1: 167–82.

    Google Scholar 

  • Fuller, Richard, and Richard Myers. 1941. The natural history of a social problem. American Sociological Review 6: 320–328.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gamson, William, and Andre Modigliani. 1987. The changing culture of affirmative action. Research in Political Sociology 3: 137–177.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gigerenzer, Gerd, Zeno Swijtink, Theodore Porter, Lorraine Daston, John Beatty, and Lorenz Krüger. 1989. The empire of chance: How probability changed science and everyday life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Glassner, Barry. 1999. The culture of fear. New York: Basic Books.

    Google Scholar 

  • Goode, Erich, and Nachman Ben-Yehuda. 1994. Moral panics: The social construction of deviance. Malden: Blackwell Publishing.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gur-Ze’ev, Ilan. 2000. The metaphysics of traffic accidents and education towards an alternative public sphere. Journal of Thought 35(3): 37–65.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gusfield, Joseph. 1981. The culture of public problems: Drinking-driving and the symbolic order. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gusfield, Joseph. 1989. Constructing the ownership of social problems: fun and profit in the welfare state. Social Problems 36(5): 431–441.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gusfield, Joseph. 1996. Contested meanings: The construction of alcohol problems. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hacking, Ian. 1975. The emergence of probability. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hacking, Ian. 1982. Biopower and the avalanche of numbers. Humanities in Society 5: 279–295.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hacking, Ian. 1990. The taming of chance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hacking, Ian. 1991. How shall we do the history of statistics? In In The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality – With Two Lectures by and an Interview with Michel Foucault, ed. Burchell Graham, Gordon Colin, and Miller Peter, 181–95. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Haggerty, Kevin. 2001. Making crime count. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Haight, Frank. 1985. Current problems in drinking-driving: research and intervention. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, supplement no. 10: 13–18.

    Google Scholar 

  • Haines, Herbert. 1979. Cognitive claimsmaking, enclosure, and the depoliticization of social problems. The Sociological Quarterly 20(1): 119–130.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Haines, Fiona. 1993. The show must go on: the response to fatalities in multiple employer workplaces. Social Problems 40(4): 547–563.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hewitt, Christopher. 1996. Estimating the number of homeless: media representations of an urban problem. Journal of Urban Affairs 18: 432–447.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hilgartner, Stephen, and Charles Bosk. 1988. The rise and fall of public problems: a public arenas model. The American Journal of Sociology 94(1): 53–78.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hird, Christopher, and John Irvine. 1979. The poverty of wealth statistics. In Demystifying Social Statistics, ed. John Irvine, Ian Miles, and Jeff Evans, 190–211. London: Pluto.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hoffman, Harold. 1935. Let’s save 12,600 lives! National Safety News 36(5): 13–4. 60.

  • Hunt, Sonja. 1988. The public health implications of private cars. In Readings for a New Public Health, ed. Claudia Martin and David McQueen, 100–115. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Igo, Sarah. 2008. The averaged American: Surveys, citizens, and the making of a mass public. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jamrozik, Adam, and Luisa Nocella. 1998. The sociology of social problems: Theoretical perspectives and methods of intervention. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jorland, Gérard, George Weisz, and Annick Opinel. 2005. Body counts: Medical quantification in historical and sociological perspective. Montréal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lerner, Barron. 2011. One for the road: Drunk driving Since 1900. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Los Angeles Times (1922). The death roll. January 20.

  • Lowney, Kathleen, and Joel Best. 1995. Stalking strangers and lovers: Changing media typifications of a new crime problem. In Images of issues: Typifying contemporary social problems, ed. Joel Best, 33–57. New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.

    Google Scholar 

  • Maclennan, Carol. 1988. From accident to crash: the auto industry and the politics of injury. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 2(3): 233–250.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Mahoney, Stanley. 1966. The oversimplified quantification of complex problems. The Social Service Review 40(1): 64–70.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Males, Mike. 2009a. The role of poverty in California teenagers’ fatal traffic crash risk. Californian Journal of Health Promotion 7(1): 1–13.

    Google Scholar 

  • Males, Mike. 2009b. Traffic crash victimizations of California children and teenagers by drinking over-21 drivers. Californian Journal of Health Promotion 7(2): 56–66.

    Google Scholar 

  • Manis, Jerome. 1974. Assessing the seriousness of social problems. Social Problems 22(1): 1–15.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Manis, Jerome. 1976. Analyzing social problems. New York: Praeger Publishers.

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin, Aryn, and Michael Lynch. 2009. Counting things and people: the practices and politics of counting. Social Problems 56(2): 243–266.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Mashaw, Jerry, and David Harfst. 1990. The struggle for auto safety. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • McShane, Clay. 1994. Down the asphalt path: The automobile and the American city. New York: Columbia University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Meyer, John, and Brian Rowan. 1977. Institutionalized organizations: formal structure as myth and ceremony. American Journal of Sociology 83(2): 340–364.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Mick, Hans. 1995. NHTSA spotlights belts and booze. Traffic Safety 95: 6–9.

    Google Scholar 

  • Miller, Daniel (ed.). 2001. Car cultures. New York: Berg.

    Google Scholar 

  • Mohun, Arwen. 2005. On the frontier of The empire of chance: statistics, accidents, and risk in industrializing america. Science in Context 18(3): 337–357.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • National Conference on Street and Highway Safety (NCSHS). 1924. Report of the committee on statistics. Washington: U.S. Government.

    Google Scholar 

  • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). 1993. Saving lives and dollars: Highway safety contribution to health care reform and deficit reduction. Washington: U.S. Department of Transportation.

    Google Scholar 

  • National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). 1995. Strategic plan. Washington: U.S. Department of Transportation.

  • National Safety News (1921). Automobile chamber says deaths per car have been halved. 4(6): 27.

  • National Safety News (1925). A decrease that isn’t a decrease. 11(3): 16.

  • National Safety News (1932). The accident barometer. 25(4): 56.

  • National Safety News (1933). Accidental deaths drop in 1932. 27(3): 12.

  • National Safety News (1936). The accident barometer. 34(1): 88.

  • National Safety News (1954). Sometimes, we’re glad to be wrong. 70(2): 17.

  • National Safety News (1957). What’s ahead? 76(6): 4.

  • Naumann, Rebecca, Ann Dellinger, Eduard Zaloshnja, Bruce Lawrence, and Ted Miller. 2010. Incidence and total lifetime costs of motor vehicle-related fatal and nonfatal injury by road user type, United States, 2005. Traffic Injury Prevention 11: 353–360.

  • Neylan, Julian. 2005. Quantifying social entities: a historical-sociological critique. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare 32(4): 23–40.

    Google Scholar 

  • Norton, Peter. 2008. Fighting traffic: The dawn of the motor age in the American city. Cambridge: The MIT Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Oliver, Christine. 1991. Strategic responses to institutional processes. Academy of Management Review 16: 145–179.

    Google Scholar 

  • Orcutt, James, and J. Blake Turner. 1993. Shocking numbers and graphic accounts: quantified images of drug problems in the print media. Social Problems 40(2): 190–206.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Outlook (1926). Motor Fodder. 142 (March 24): 443–444.

  • Packer, Jeremy. 2003. Disciplining mobility: Governing and safety. In Foucault, Cultural Studies, and Governmentality, ed. Jack Bratich, Jeremy Packer, and Cameron McCarthy, 135–161. Albany: State University of New York Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Packer, Jeremy. 2008. Mobility without mayhem: Safety, cars, and citizenship. Durham: Duke University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Porter, Theodore. 1986. The rise of statistical thinking, 1820–1900. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Porter, Theodore. 1995. Trust in numbers: The pursuit of objectivity in science and public life. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Price, C.W. 1923. Automotive industry should lead in safety movement. Automotive Industries 49: 1187–1190.

    Google Scholar 

  • Reekie, Gail. 1998. Measuring immorality: Social inquiry and the problem of illegitimacy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Reinarman, Craig, and Harry Levine. 1995. The crack attack: Politics and media in America’s latest drug scare. In Images of Issues: Typifying contemporary social problems, ed. Joel Best, 147–186. New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.

    Google Scholar 

  • Robinson, Matthew, and Renee Scherlen. 2007. Lies, damned lies, and drug war statistics: A critical analysis of claims made by the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Albany: State University of New York Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Rushin’ roulette. 1963. The Travelers 1963 book of street and highway accident data. Hartford: Travelers Insurance Co.

    Google Scholar 

  • Rusnock, Andrea. 2002. Vital accounts: Quantifying health and population in Eighteenth-century England and France. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Schnapp, Jeffrey. 1999. Crash (speed as engine of individuation). Modernism/Modernity 6(1): 1–49.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Schneider, Joseph. 1985. Social problems theory: the constructionist view. Annual Review of Sociology 11: 209–229.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Scott, Richard. 1987. Organizations: Rational, natural, and open systems. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.

    Google Scholar 

  • Seiler, Cotten. 2008. Republic of drivers: A cultural history of automobility in America. Chicago: Chicago University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Sherman, Sandra. 2001. Imagining poverty: Quantification and the decline of paternalism. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Spector, Malcolm, and John Kitsuse. 1977. Constructing social problems. Menlo Park: Cummings Publishing Company.

    Google Scholar 

  • Starr, Paul. 1987. The sociology of official statistics. In The Politics of Numbers, eds. William Alonso and Paul Starr. New York: Russell Sage.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stellwagen, H.P. 1924. An analysis of 1923 automobile fatalities. National Safety News 10(6): 28.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stevens, Arthur. 1941. Highway safety and automobile styling. Boston: Christopher Publishing House.

    Google Scholar 

  • Surface Transportation Policy Partnership (STPP). (2009). Dangerous by design. Washington, D.C.

  • Tenney, Edward. 1962. The highway jungle. New York: Exposition Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • The Automobile (1906). Score one for the automobile. 14(21): 836

  • The wreckord. 1942. The Travelers 1942 book of street and highway accident data. Hartford: Travelers Insurance Co.

    Google Scholar 

  • Timmermans, Stefan, and Rene Almeling. 2009. Objectification, standardization, and commodification in health care: a conceptual readjustment. Social Science and Medicine 69(1): 21–27.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • U.S. Congress. Senate Committee on Government Operations. Subcommittee on Executive Reorganization. 1965. Federal role in traffic safety: Hearings. Eighty-ninth Congress (First and Second Sessions). Washington: U.S. Government.

    Google Scholar 

  • Vardi, Itai. 2012. Normalizing accidents: Cars, carnage, and the disappearance of social problems. Doctoral Dissertation, Department of Sociology, Boston University.

  • Weber, Max. 1978. Economy and society. Berkeley: University of California Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wiener, Carolyn. 1981. The politics of alcoholism: Building an arena around a social problem. New Brunswick: Transaction Books.

    Google Scholar 

  • Woolf, Harry. 1961. Quantification: A history of the meaning of measurement in the natural and social sciences. New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company.

    Google Scholar 

  • Young, Robert. 1979. Why are figures so significant? The role and critique of quantification. In Demystifying social statistics, ed. John Irvine, Ian Miles, and Jeff Evans, 63–74. London, UK: Pluto.

    Google Scholar 

  • Zelizer, Viviana. 1985. Pricing the priceless child: The changing social value of children. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Itai Vardi.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Vardi, I. Quantifying Accidents: Cars, Statistics, and Unintended Consequences in the Construction of Social Problems Over Time. Qual Sociol 37, 345–367 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11133-014-9280-1

Download citation

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11133-014-9280-1

Keywords

Navigation