TY - JOUR
T1 - Safety through engaged workers
T2 - The link between Safety-II and work engagement
AU - Homann, Franziska
AU - Limbert, Caroline
AU - Bell, Nicholas
AU - Sykes, Peter
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/10/13
Y1 - 2021/10/13
N2 - Safety-II (and related concepts such as ‘Safety differently’) are relatively recent developments in the field of health and safety management. The central argument of these approaches is that interventions should focus on collaborating with workers to understand and provide the resources that workers need to allow work to proceed successfully and safely. Safety-II relies upon workers volunteering information, meaningfully participating in discussions around the organisation of work, and being trusted. However, Ajslev et al. (2020) highlight the psychosocial barriers to ‘participatory approaches’. Few papers have explored the psychosocial conditions in which modern, collaborative approaches to safety might flourish. To address this, this paper explores the similarities between the concepts of work engagement and Safety-II. In particular, this paper identifies that both rely on similar antecedents (such as certain leadership practices, promoting autonomy and creating a just organisation). The inference is that organisations that wish to implement modern, collaborative approaches to safety, will need to understand and address much wider issues regarding how workers are perceived and managed. This is the first paper to compare the antecedents of Safety-II and engagement, and also the first to present evidence that these two concepts complement each other.
AB - Safety-II (and related concepts such as ‘Safety differently’) are relatively recent developments in the field of health and safety management. The central argument of these approaches is that interventions should focus on collaborating with workers to understand and provide the resources that workers need to allow work to proceed successfully and safely. Safety-II relies upon workers volunteering information, meaningfully participating in discussions around the organisation of work, and being trusted. However, Ajslev et al. (2020) highlight the psychosocial barriers to ‘participatory approaches’. Few papers have explored the psychosocial conditions in which modern, collaborative approaches to safety might flourish. To address this, this paper explores the similarities between the concepts of work engagement and Safety-II. In particular, this paper identifies that both rely on similar antecedents (such as certain leadership practices, promoting autonomy and creating a just organisation). The inference is that organisations that wish to implement modern, collaborative approaches to safety, will need to understand and address much wider issues regarding how workers are perceived and managed. This is the first paper to compare the antecedents of Safety-II and engagement, and also the first to present evidence that these two concepts complement each other.
KW - Occupational health and safety
KW - Safety-II
KW - Theoretical framework
KW - Work engagement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85116890357&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ssci.2021.105521
DO - 10.1016/j.ssci.2021.105521
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85116890357
SN - 0925-7535
VL - 146
JO - Safety Science
JF - Safety Science
M1 - 105521
ER -