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Volume 21, No. 38Journal 38

DOI:https://doi.org/10.15517/aq3pwx66

Published November 17, 2025

Scientific Papers

  1. Railway crossings with promise of safety improvement in Costa Rica

    Road safety focused on railway crossings has historically been very weak in Costa Rica. This has generated important consequences in the efficiency and losses of time, for both the passenger of the train system, and for the users of the road, due to the blockages and delays generated by the occurrence of crashes in these locations. Additionally, a greater number of crashes also implies a greater occurrence of major injuries, so it is necessary to reduce the number of crashes at railway crossings by applying infrastructure improvements, in addition to other approaches. This research applies Bayesian statistics and spatial statistics simultaneously to improve the predictions in the total number of crashes at each railway crossing and uses this input to classify the crossings according to their excess of crashes. The crossings with greater promise of improvement are identified and therefore their improvements should be prioritized in related budgets. The results show that the crossing in the Mercado de Mayoreo in La Sabana, the crossing of the Río Pirro in Heredia, among others, present conditions to prioritize their investment.

  2. Statistics in road crashes with victims in Costa Rica for the period 2012-2016: An approach to the road safety analysis from the masculinity and femininity social roles

    The road accidents in Costa Rica have taken the lives of more than 1897 people between 2012 and 2016, of whom 86% were men, the vast majority of car or motorcycle drivers. Of the remaining 14% of women who died, more than 75% were passengers in a vehicle, pedestrians or cyclists. These data raise a hypothesis: the road system and mobility in Costa Rica, responds to a series of social, cultural and historical conditions, framed within a patriarchal scheme in which attitudes and roles of masculinity and femininity predominate that favor that men have a greater exposure to risk of a road accident and suffering fatal or serious injuries than women, the result of a road system configured from the symbolism imposed by a misunderstood masculinity. The article aims to be an initial input to generate a wider and broader discussion about the impact of social roles associated with the condition of being a man or woman on road safety.