Pete Dyson on making transport more human

Pete Dyson on making transport more human

How can we make transport more human? On this episode, I'm exploring the human risk dynamics of transport — both from the perspective of the traveller, but also from the perspective of those who run and design transport networks and policy.

Every single one of us has reasons why we want to get from A to B and usually, we have to make choices about how we do that - whether we walk, cycle, drive a car, ride a motorbike, catch public transport or get on a plane. There’s human risk in the decisions we make around how we travel - for us and for others. Equally, those who design transport policy, manage networks and run travel operators also run human risk in what they do.

My guest on this episode is Pete Dyson. He’s a behavioural scientist who advises the UK’s Department of Transport on how to apply behavioural science in policy. And he’s the co-author of a fascinating new book Transport for Humans: are we nearly there yet?

The other co-author is Rory Sutherland, who has appeared on the show before. You'll find links to those episodes at the end of these show notes

In my discussion with Pete, we look at what travel means and how our views on it are shaped by influences that might not immediately be obvious. He’s got a host of anecdotes that I guarantee will make you think differently about travel and transport. And one of the things I find fascinating is that the ideas he shares aren’t just applicable to transport contexts. We can use the same thinking for areas like compliance and ethics.

To find out more about the book visit https://londonpublishingpartnership.co.uk/transport-for-humans/

Listener warning — there were some issues with the audio while recording, so the sound quality isn’t as high as it normally is. But I promise you that lower-quality audio is compensated for by really high-quality content.

Links to the previous episodes featuring Pete's co-author Rory Sutherland:

Rory on Compliance — https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/rory-sutherland-on-compliance/

Rory Sutherland & Gerald Ashley on Networks — https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/rory-sutherland-gerald-ashley/

Rory Sutherland & Gerald Ashley on Prosilience — https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/gerald-ashley-rory-sutherland/

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(368)

Sarah Bowen & Merle Van Den Akker on Studying Behavioural Science

Sarah Bowen & Merle Van Den Akker on Studying Behavioural Science

What can learn from the study of Behavioural Science? Like many people in the field, I fell into BeSci long after finishing my academic studies. Back then, it wasn't an option that one could study in...

14 Des 20201h 9min

Dr Colin Lawrence on Risk & Uncertainty

Dr Colin Lawrence on Risk & Uncertainty

What's the difference between Risk and Uncertainty? That's what my guest on this episode, Dr Colin Lawrence, helps me to explore. He's spent his entire career looking at risk and has been a Chief Ri...

11 Des 20201h 2min

Professor David Hess on Bad Compliance

Professor David Hess on Bad Compliance

What happens when employees have little or no respect for their organization's Compliance Program? It's obviously bad, but how bad? That's what my guest on this episode Professor David Hess has resear...

7 Des 202058min

Dr Magda Osman on Behavioural Interventions that Fail

Dr Magda Osman on Behavioural Interventions that Fail

What can we learn from Behavioural Interventions that fail? That's what my guest on this episode, Dr Magda Osman set out to discover in some recent research. We often hear about 'nudges' that work we...

4 Des 20201h 2min

Rabbi Yonason Goldson on a Rabbi's View of Ethics

Rabbi Yonason Goldson on a Rabbi's View of Ethics

What can we learn from religion about ethics? After all, religions have had rules about what people should and shouldn't be doing since well before the advent of Compliance & Ethics functions. And t...

1 Des 202058min

Tom Burgis on Kleptopia - how dirty money is conquering the world

Tom Burgis on Kleptopia - how dirty money is conquering the world

What are kleptocracies and how do they operate? How is dirty money laundered and why is it increasingly a global problem? These are the questions, my guest on this episode, Tom Burgis, sets out to a...

27 Nov 202054min

Dr Benny Cheung on Nudging Honesty

Dr Benny Cheung on Nudging Honesty

How can we get people to be more honest? That's what my guest on this episode, Dr Benny Cheung, set out to discover. He was commissioned to do so research for the UK's Insurance Fraud Bureau and ran s...

23 Nov 20201h 6min

Paul Donovan on Prejudice & why it is so pernicious

Paul Donovan on Prejudice & why it is so pernicious

What is prejudice, why does it exist and why is it such a bad thing? That's what Economist Paul Donovan seeks to answer in his new book Profit & Prejudice. He explores it from an economic perspectiv...

20 Nov 202052min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
tingenes-tilstand
liberal-halvtime
sinnsyn
villmarksliv
rss-zahid-ali-hjelper-deg
forskningno
rekommandert
rss-overskuddsliv
jss
rss-paradigmepodden
tidlose-historier
vett-og-vitenskap-med-gaute-einevoll
fjellsportpodden
dekodet-2
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
rss-inn-til-kjernen-med-sunniva-rose
nevropodden
kvinnehelsepodden
diagnose