A safety counterculture challenge to a “safety climate”

This case study is about a small group of workmen caught in a common dilemma regarding work safety. They must work safely and maintain production within a pathological organization that does not meaningfully reward participation or communication. They do so as a group and socially construct danger, injury and safety for themselves. They constitute a functioning counterculture and challenge the safety climate contrived by managers. Although limited in scope, the study suggests that we can learn from the details of their interactions with their work environment, with one another, and with their managers.

[1]  Stian Antonsen,et al.  Safety culture and the issue of power , 2009 .

[2]  D. Fang,et al.  Why operatives engage in unsafe work behavior: Investigating factors on construction sites , 2008 .

[3]  A. Gouldner Patterns Of Industrial Bureaucracy , 1954 .

[4]  R. Flin,et al.  Safety culture: philosopher’s stone or man of straw? , 1998 .

[5]  M. Bourrier The Contribution of Organizational Design to Safety , 2005 .

[6]  Theo Nichols,et al.  The Sociology of Industrial Injury , 2005 .

[7]  Knut Haukelid Theories of (safety) culture revisited—An anthropological approach , 2008 .

[8]  A. Strauss Basics Of Qualitative Research , 1992 .

[9]  Kathryn Mearns,et al.  Measuring safety climate: identifying the common features☆ , 2000 .

[10]  Christian Koch,et al.  Integration, differentiation and ambiguity in safety cultures , 2004 .

[11]  R Flin,et al.  Measuring safety climate in health care , 2006, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[12]  Dong-Chul Seo,et al.  An explicative model of unsafe work behavior , 2005 .

[13]  Johan M. Sanne,et al.  Incident reporting or storytelling? Competing schemes in a safety-critical and hazardous work setting , 2008 .

[14]  William DiFazio,et al.  Post-Industrial Chemical Workers in New Jersey@@@America's Working Man: Work, Home, and Politics among Blue-Collar Property Owners , 1987 .

[15]  Danièle Champoux,et al.  Occupational health and safety management in small size enterprises: an overview of the situation and avenues for intervention and research , 2003 .

[16]  Charles Vaught,et al.  Incorporation and Mechanical Solidarity in an Underground Coal Mine , 1980 .

[17]  Garry Gray A Socio-Legal Ethnography of the Right to Refuse Dangerous Work , 2011 .

[18]  David L. Collinson,et al.  `Surviving the Rigs': Safety and Surveillance on North Sea Oil Installations , 1999 .

[19]  Shoshana Zuboff,et al.  In the Age of the Smart Machine: The Future of Work and Power , 1989 .

[20]  C. Geertz The interpretation of cultures: Selected essays , 1975 .

[21]  Andrew Hopkins,et al.  What are we to make of safe behaviour programs , 2006 .

[22]  Bernhard Zimolong,et al.  Occupational Health and Safety Management , 2006 .

[23]  Garry C. Gray,et al.  The Regulation of Corporate Violations Punishment, Compliance, and the Blurring of Responsibility , 2006 .

[24]  David Halle America's working man : work, home, and politics among blue-collar property owners , 1984 .

[25]  K. Weick ENACTED SENSEMAKING IN CRISIS SITUATIONS[1] , 1988 .