Gambetta et al - Streetwise
Tags: books
- Gambetta, Diego, and Heather Hamill. Streetwise: How Taxi Drivers Establish Customer’s Trustworthiness, 2005. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=none&isbn=9781610442350.
- Talks about how taxi drivers must adopt a very quick rate of understanding their clients
- Signaling theory
- how does a hailer signal they are trustworthy? How does a mimic attempting to rob a taxi driver signal they are trustworthy?
- Age, race, gender, dress, etc
- “Gut feeling”
- Taxi drivers develop some amount of gut feelings
- Most taxi drivers acknowledge that they are not in a position of power
- If mimics really want to decieve, they can
- Average take in a livery cab robbery is 75 dollars
- Signs:
- older over younger
- women over men
- “white” over “black:
- Spanish over other ethnic groups (iff driver is Spanish)
- Individuals over multiple passengers
- Groups with one female is safer
- Wealthier over poorer
- Known passengers over strangers
- Most important!!
- Callers over hailers
- Catholic over Protestant if the driver is Catholic (and vice versa)
- Self-absorbed over inquisitive
- Candid over shifty
- Friendly and calm over aggressive/agitated
- Signaling theory
Belfast
- Belfast drivers are split between protestant and sectarian
- Have strong community ties, often ex or related to armed groups in some way
- Often take a hawkish approach to being robbed
- Protestant taxi drivers won’t go to Catholic areas, and etc
New York
- Taxi drivers are fish out of water
- Few community ties
- Signaling from dispatcher is highly used
- Certain neighborhoods avoided
- Will often try to calm someone down rather than fight against them