3.4 References

Bliss T (2004). Implementing the Recommendations of the World Report on Road Traffic Injury Prevention. Transport Notes series; no. TRN 1. World Bank, Washington, DC.

Bliss T & Breen J (2009). Implementing the Recommendations of the World Report on Road Traffic Injury Prevention. Country guidelines for the Conduct of Road Safety Management Capacity Reviews and the Specification of Lead Agency Reforms, Investment Strategies and Safe System Projects. Global Road Safety Facility, World Bank. Washington, DC.

Bliss T & Breen J (2013). Road Safety Management Capacity Reviews and Safe System Projects. Global Road Safety Facility, World Bank. Washington, DC.

Breen J, Howard E, & Bliss T (2008). An Independent Review of Road Safety in Sweden. Swedish Roads Administration, Börlange.

Breen J, Humphreys RM, & Melibaeva S (2013). Guidelines for Mainstreaming Road Safety on Regional Trade Road Corridors. Sub-Saharan Africa Transport Policy Program (SSATP) working paper series, no. 97. World Bank, Washington, DC.

DaCoTA (2012). DaCoTa - Data Collection Transfer & Analysis (Grant agreement No TREN/FP7/TR/233659/DaCoTA). Project co-funded by the European Commission within the Seventh Framework Programme.

European Road Safety Observatory (2014).

EU Directive 2008/96/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 November 2008 on road infrastructure safety management.

GRSF (2012). MDB Staff Training Program: Module 7. African Development Bank, Tunis.

GRSF/World Bank (2006-2013). Unpublished country road safety management capacity reviews. World Bank. Washington, DC.

GRSF/World Bank (2020). Global Road Safety Facility: Leveraging Global Road Safety Successes. World Bank. Washington, DC.

Howard E, Breen J, & Bliss T (2010). Road Safety Management Capacity Review Western Australia. Final Report. Eric Howard and Associates, Jeanne Breen Consulting and the World Bank.

ISO (2012). ISO 39001:2012: Road Traffic Safety (RTS) Management Systems – Requirements with Guidance for Use. International Standards Organisation, Geneva.

ITF (2008). Towards Zero: Ambitious Road Safety Targets through a Safe System Approach. OECD Publishing, Paris.

ITF (2016). Zero Road Deaths and Serious Injuries: Leading a Paradigm Shift to a Safe System. OECD Publishing, Paris.

ITF (2023). Road Safety Annual Report 2023. OECD Publishing, Paris.

Koornstra M, Lynam D, Nilsson G, Noordzij P, Pettersson HE, Wegman F, & Wouters P (2002). SUNFlower: A comparative study of the development of road safety in Sweden, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. SWOV, Leidschendam.

LTSA (2000). Road Safety Strategy 2010: A Consultation Document. National Road Safety Committee, Land Transport Safety Authority, Wellington.

Peden M, Scurfield R, Sleet D, Mohan D, Hyder A, Jarawan E, & Mathers C (eds.) (2004). World Report on Road Traffic Injury Prevention. World Health Organization, Geneva.

Stigson H, Kullgren A & Krafft M (2011). Use of car crashes resulting in injuries to identify system weaknesses. Paper presented at the 22nd International Technical Conference on the Enhanced Safety of Vehicles (ESV). Washington, DC.

Turner B, Job S, & Mitra S (2021). Guide for Road Safety Interventions: Evidence of What Works and What Does Not Work. World Bank, Washington, DC.

United Nations Road Safety Collaboration (UNRSC) (2006-2013). See http://www.who.int/roadsafety/ for range of guidance produced.

Wegman F, Brouwer M, Cauzard JP, Elvik R, Machata K, Makinen T, Stemborg L, & Yannis G (2001). Transport safety performance indicators. European Transport Safety Council, Brussels.

WHO (2021), Global Plan for the Decade of Action for Road Safety 2021-2030. World Health Organization, Geneva.

WHO (2023). Global status report on road safety 2023. World Health Organization, Geneva.