Public Transit Safety Among University Students

Status

Complete

Project Timeline

July 1, 2018 - September 30, 2019

Principal Investigator

Project Team

Madeline Brozen, Miriam Pinski

Areas of Expertise

Public Transit, Shared Mobility, & Active Transportation Safety, Public Health, & Mobility Justice

Campus(es)

UCLA

Project Summary

Transit use is on the decline in many American cities. Research has shown that concerns about transit safety may influence travel behavior and transit use, and that women are particularly fearful about victimization while travelling. Studies have also shown that women are also very concerned about one type of crime — sexual harassment — which often goes unreported, and thus remains largely invisible to transit operators. The research team will survey college students in 16 cities in six continents to examine their patterns of mobility and transit, with an emphasis on their feelings of safety on public transit and other transportation modes, experiences of sexual harassment, and other types of crime and victimization on public transport and other transportation modes. The results of the survey will establish the extent to which fear regarding their safety affects college students’ transit ridership, and the research team will examine how survey responses may vary because of the students’ sociodemographic characteristics. This project will allow the research team to assess transit riders’ safety needs, and examine innovative policies that respond to such needs. The research team will also interview transit operators in major California regions to identify their policies about transit safety, and how these have changed over the years.