Five types of passengers: How we respond to fines on the bus

June 23, 2021

The problem is the same – no ticket – but reactions are diverse when the ticket inspector meets a passenger without a valid ticket and consequently issues a fine. Based on 40 videos recorded with body-worn cameras from the ticket inspectors’ uniforms, researchers have made an in-depth analysis of passengers’ patterns of reaction and categorised them into five types. Camilla Bank FriisThe study clearly has a preventive focus, explains PhD Fellow Camilla Bank Friis from the Department of Sociology. Moreover, some passengers changed types in the process – from the innocent to the more defiant type. “I was surprised to see that, and we can teach ticket inspectors and other authorities to adjust to that.

The problem is the same – no ticket – but reactions are diverse when the ticket inspector meets a passenger without a valid ticket and consequently issues a fine.

Based on 40 videos recorded with body-worn cameras from the ticket inspectors’ uniforms, researchers have made an in-depth analysis of passengers’ patterns of reaction and categorised them into five types.

Patterns of reaction are ranked according to how defensively the individual passenger reacts to the fine, and they range far: from the honest passenger who admits to having made a mistake to the wronged or superior passenger who feels unjustly treated, challenges the inspector or ‘knows best’ (see table below).

Five passenger reactions in ticket fining events

Type of reaction Typical characteristics The innocent passenger Shows good intentions and may have a good excuse The honest passenger Wishes to appear as a ’good citizen’ The wronged passenger Feels like a victim, who is unjustly treated The defiant passenger Does not seem to care and not afraid of authorities The superior passenger Wants to control things and ’knows best’

Many passengers do not intend to act stupidly or to make life difficult for someone who is just trying to do his or her job.

Perhaps the study can make us more aware of our own behaviour – even when we are frustrated about getting a fine.

Camilla Bank Friis

The study clearly has a preventive focus, explains PhD Fellow Camilla Bank Friis from the Department of Sociology. She conducted the study together with Professor Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard from The Netherlands Institute for Crime and Law Enforcement.

“We quite simply wanted to learn how people respond when presented with a fine – and how their reactions are tied to cases where the passenger becomes aggressive. This gives the study a preventive focus, as it should help ticket inspectors identify specific patterns of reaction and avoid situations that escalate,” says Bank Friis.

Escalation to aggression

Whereas the ‘innocent’ or ‘honest’ passenger will typically try to explain that the missing ticket is a result of a misunderstanding or point out that he is a good citizen who normally buys a ticket, the ‘defiant’ or ‘superior’ passenger will react much more defensively.

This may result in an actual confrontation, where the passenger refuses to show his ID, yells at or, at worst, pushes, kicks or threatens the ticket inspector.

The study does not say how often this happens, though. The 40 analysed incidents were chosen because they span all types of confrontations, from the minor conflicts to hard confrontations, and not on account of how often passengers react in a specific way.

However, in 26 out of the 40 studied episodes, the passenger caused the conflict to escalate. Moreover, some passengers changed types in the process – from the innocent to the more defiant type. A shift seen among aggressive passengers in particular.

Episode from the study

A young man is buying a ticket on his smartphone when a ticket inspector asks for some ID and explains that once he is on the bus it is too late to buy a ticket. The passenger explains that he has bought a ticket and continues:

“I also bought one this morning. See! [Shows his phone to the inspector]. I always have a ticket. See how many tickets I have bought.”

The inspector insists on seeing some ID and they continue arguing when another inspector arrives. The passenger finally agrees to show his ID and all three get off the bus.

“Come on, relax. It is fucking 24 kroner. Do you think I can’t pay 24 kroner? Why can’t you just show some consideration?” the passenger says with his arms spread out, palms facing upwards.

He continues, now addressing the other inspector: “I did buy a ticket. Your colleague just does not want to see it.”

We can learn from aggressive confrontations

According to Camilla Bank Friis, this demonstrates the dynamic often at play during ticket inspection or other types of rule enforcement.

Here the video footage has made it possible to analyse in detail how the situation develops over time.

“Past studies have looked at citizens who respond with disrespect when faced with the police, for example, but our study shows that especially in aggressive confrontations passengers change types; that is, their line of reasoning changes,” Bank Friis explains.

“I was surprised to see that, and we can teach ticket inspectors and other authorities to adjust to that. We therefore recommend introducing conflict training programmes that take into account the different types and their risks. Inspectors should be aware that passengers may draw on very different arguments and be ready to adjust their conflict management behaviour accordingly.”

She also hopes the study will make more people reflect on their own behaviour.

“Of course, many passengers do not intend to act stupidly or to make life difficult for someone who is just trying to do his or her job. Perhaps the study can make us more aware of our own behaviour – even when we are frustrated about getting a fine.”

About the study

The study has been published in the scientific journal Deviant Behavior. The article is titled ‘Citizen Self-Presentation and Aggression in Ticket Fining Events: A Video Observational Study’.

The study and article were conducted by PhD Fellow Camilla Bank Friis from the Department of Sociology and Professor and Senior Researcher Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard from The Netherlands Institute for Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR), who is also affiliated to the Department of Sociology.

The research was funded by the Danish Working Environment Research Fund and the Independent Research Fund Denmark.

The study is based on detailed analysis of 40 video recordings of ticket fining events. The analysed videos were selected among a larger sample recorded using a body-worn camera attached to the ticket inspector’s uniform. The 40 incidents have been subject to systematic, qualitative analysis, where passengers’ verbal as well as non-verbal behaviour were coded and categorised chronologically.

Another subsample has previously been used to analyse the correlation between inspector’s behaviour and passenger aggression: Ticket inspectors in action: Body-worn camera analysis of aggressive and nonaggressive passenger encounters.

The source of this news is from Copenhagen University

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