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Journal Article

Citation

Hutchinson B, Dekker S, Rae A. Safety Sci. 2022; 151: e105738.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ssci.2022.105738

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Safety Management Systems are developed to help manage occupational risk, but they can also increase an organisation's exposure to risk. This contradictory effect may happen when written artefacts (plans, risk assessments etc.) enable work to happen by encouraging a belief that the risks have been managed, when in reality they have not been. In this paper we introduce the term "enabling device" to cover the situation where a written artefact facilitates the commencement of work. We explore how enabling devices can become excessively symbolic, where they facilitate work to commence even when they may be decoupled from the issues they were designed to manage. We argue that highly symbolic artefacts acting in their enabling function: a) become more speculative than functional, b) make assumptions and beliefs "appear more real" by giving them an observable form, c) fill a need for people to solve issues without actually having to solve the issue, and d) increasingly become the unit of management instead of the issues and then take on a life of their own. This work suggests that practitioners should more critically evaluate the often invisible and potentially pervasive symbolism vested in safety artefacts to direct effective and sustainable risk interventions.


Language: en

Keywords

Accident Analysis; False assurance; Fantasy planning; Routines; Safety Management Systems; Symbolism

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