Fasten a Citizen: Forsing Seat Belts in a Soviet Car

 
PIIS207987840022875-1-1
DOI10.18254/S207987840022875-1
Publication type Article
Status Published
Authors
Affiliation: Higher School of Economics
Address: Russian Federation, Moscow
Journal nameISTORIYA
Edition
Abstract

In the second half of the 1960s, the Soviet authorities accelerated development of the passenger car industry. The new cars had to meet the best world standards, but they also had to be a source of danger to citizens. Contradiction between the tasks of mass production and safety of citizens caused a clash of interests between the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Ministry of Automobile Industry in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The article examines the history of the introduction of safety belts as one of the subjects of this clash, based on the analysis of previously unpublished archival materials, personal documents and articles in the magazine “Za ruliom”.  Research shown how the task of introducing safety belts, which initially concerned only export car models, was set at the national level with the active support of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Concerns of the Soviet leadership about the increase in accidents during motorization led to a rethinking of how to ensure road safety by creating a safer car. The history of the development, testing, and industrial introduction of seat belts turned out to be a complex process, in which, ultimately, the interests of various Soviet institutions intersected. At the same time, years of press discussions about the benefits of seat belts, which reflected a clash of interagency interests, influenced the opinion of soviet drivers long before seat belts became commercially available.

KeywordsLate Soviet, History of materiality, Ministry of Internal Affairs, Ministry of the Automotive Industry, “Za ruliom”, USSR
AcknowledgmentResearch supported by Russian Scientific Fund (Project №19-78-10017).
Received06.09.2022
Publication date25.12.2022
Number of characters49710
Cite  
100 rub.
When subscribing to an article or issue, the user can download PDF, evaluate the publication or contact the author. Need to register.

Number of purchasers: 0, views: 110

Readers community rating: votes 0

1. AvtoVAZ mezhdu proshlym i buduschim. Istoriya Volzhskogo avtomobil'nogo zavoda 1966—2005 / red. Zhuravlev S. V. i dr. M., 2006.

2. Aggeeva I. “More Great Goods to the People! Better Work for This Year after Year!” the Soviet Alternative to the Western Society of Mass Consumption (1960s — 1970s) // ISTORIYA. 2022. Vol. 13. Is. 3 (113). URL: https://history.jes.su/s207987840020454-8-1/ DOI: 10.18254/S207987840020454-8

3. Latur B. Gde nedostayuschaya massa? Sotsiologiya odnoj dveri. V chest' Roberta Foksa / per. s angl. N. Movninoj // Sotsiologiya veschej: sb. st. M.: Territoriya buduschego, 2006. C. 199—223.

4. Prokof'eva E. Yu. Istoriya otechestvennoj avtomobil'noj promyshlennosti: ot edinichnogo k massovomu tipu organizatsii proizvodstva (1896—1991 gg.) Diss. na soiskanie stepeni doktora istoricheskikh nauk, Samara, 2011.

5. Pokidko P. Beer Culture in the USSR in the 1950—1970s (on the Example of Leningrad and the Leningrad Region) // ISTORIYA. 2021. Vol. 12. Issue 1 (99). URL: https://history.jes.su/s207987840012370-6-1/ DOI: 10.18254/S207987840012370-6

6. Petrova A. A. Konstruirovanie sovetskogo kachestva, «rynok prodavtsa» i bezopasnost' na proizvodstve: spetsial'naya odezhda dlya rabochikh v khruschevskij period // Laboratorium: Zhurnal sotsial'nykh issledovanij. 2022. № 1. S. 60—87.

7. Skoryatin O. V. Khozyajstvennaya kul'tura Volzhskogo avtomobil'nogo zavoda: opyt vzaimodejstviya sovetskoj i zapadnoevropejskoj modelej// Vestnik Samarskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. 2007. № 1. S. 241—249.

8. Tverdyukova E. D. Antiservis: lichnyj avtomobil' i ego tekhnicheskoe obsluzhivanie v SSSR (1960-e — 1980-e gg.) // Novejshaya istoriya Rossii. 2018. T. 8. № 3. S. 659—678.

9. Shattenberg S. Leonid Brezhnev. Velichie i tragediya cheloveka i strany, M.: ROSSPEhN, 2019.

10. Andreasson R., Bäckström C.G. The Seat Belt: Swedish Research and Development for Global Automotive Safety. Älkvarleby, 2000.

11. Bhalla K., Schotten M. Building Road Safety Institutions in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: The Case of Argentina// Health System and Reform, 2019. Vol. 5. Is. 2. P. 121—133.

12. Chunikhin K. Risk and Respirators: The Hazardous Trajectories of Soviet Occupational Safety // Technology and Culture. 2022. Vol. 63. № 3. P. 603—633.

13. Crook T., Ebster M. Risk and the History of Governing Modern Britain, c.1800—2000 // Governing Risks: Danger, Safety and Accidents in Modern Britain / eds. T. Crook, M. Ebster. L.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. P. 1—26.

14. Esbester M., Wetmore J. M. Introduction: Global Perspectives on Road Safety History // Technology and Culture, 2015. Vol. 56. № 2. P. 307—318.

15. Fava V., Garejeli L. East-West cooperation in the automotive industry: Enterprises, mobility, production// The Journal Transport History, 2017. Vol.38. Is.1. P.11–19.

16. Fava V. Between Business and Ideology: The Soviet Union and the Cold War in Fiat Corporate Strategy, 1957–1972 // Journal of Cold War Studies, 2019. Vol. 20. Is. 4. P. 26—64.

17. Gatejeli L. Driving Behind the Iron Curtain. Automobility in the Eastern Bloc// Mobility history, 2016. Vol. 7. Is.1. P. 117—122.

18. Häland Y. The Evolution of the Three Point Seat Belt from Yesterday to Tomorrow//IRCOBI Conference. Madrid, September 2006. URL: http://www.ircobi.org/wordpress/downloads/irc0111/2006/BertilAldmanLecture/01.pdf

19. Kochetkova E. A. Making Food Modernity: Science and Technology in Late Soviet Nutrition and Food Production// Contemporary European History, 2023 (in print).

20. Lockton G. Science, Technology and Road Safety in the Motor Age. Unpublished PHD Thesis. University of Leicester, 2021.

21. Mobilities in Socialist and Post-Socialist States. Societies on the Move / eds. K. Burrel, K. Horschelmann. N. Y.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.

22. Norton P. Urban Transport and Mobility in Technology and Culture // Technology and Culture, 2020. Vol. 61. № 4. P. 1197—1211.

23. Pozharliev L. Collectivity vs. connectivity: Highway peripheralization in former Yugoslavia (1940s—1980s) // The Journal of Transport History. 2016. Vol. 37. № 2. P. 194—213.

24. Rubin E. The Trabant: Consumption, Eigen-Sinn, and the Movement // History Workshop Journal, 2009. Vol. 68. P. 27—44.

25. Siegelbaum L. H. On the Side: Car Culture in the USSR, 1960s — 1980s // Technology and Culture, 2009. Vol. 50. № 1. P. 1—23.

26. The Socialist Car. Automobility in the Eastern Bloc / ed. L. H. Siegelbaum. Ithaka: Cornell University Press, 2011.

27. Wetmore J. M. Delegating to the Automobile: Experimenting with Automotive Restraints in the 1970s // Technology and Culture. 2015. Vol. 56. № 2. P. 440—463.

28. Williams C. A. Risk on the Roads: Police, Motor Traffic and Management of Space, c.1900—50 // Governing Risks: Danger, Safety and Accidents in Modern Britain / eds. T. Crook, M. Ebster. L.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. P. 195—220.

29. Wollet B. W. Spinning the Wheels: Americans and the Environmental Politics of Transportation, 1943—2007: Unpublished PHD Thesis. University of Delaware, 2021.

30. Zhang J. Driving toward modernity: cars and the lives of the middle class in contemporary China. Ithaka: Cornell University Press, 2019.

Система Orphus

Loading...
Up