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Readiness to Change: Perceptions of Safety Culture up and down the Supply Chain

Stiles, Shelley; Ryan, Brendan; Golightly, David

Authors

Shelley Stiles

David Golightly



Abstract

Safety culture research tends to treat organisations as a single body, with less focus on understanding how perceptions vary in a multi stakeholder environment. One such example of a multi-stakeholder environment is a construction project. The success of safety interventions must be sensitive to the interfaces and relationships, and different perceptions, between Principal Contractors and their Supply Chain, particularly for Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs) that may have fundamentally different safety management systems and culture. This paper explores whether there is a difference in perception between project members. It tests whether perceptions are driven by a perceived hierarchy of greater maturity for Principal Contractors or whether different organisational layers of the project rate themselves highly in comparison to others, as a form of self enhancement. 17 workshops were undertaken across four different Principal Contractors, and their respective Supply Chains, comprising a total of 367 participants (Principal contractor n = 114; supply chain n = 253). Participants were asked to rate the safety culture maturity of their organisation and the safety culture maturity of the other group using Hudson’s safety culture maturity model. The results identified a significant difference in the perceived safety culture maturity of the Principal Contractor and Supply Chain, with Principal Contractors perceived by all parties as more mature than the supply chain. This suggests that the power structure across a project has more of an effect on perceptions than self-enhancement by any organizational type. The divergent power relationship between Principal Contractor and their Supply Chain may influence the reported levels of safety culture maturity for the project as a whole, and has a bearing on how safety culture interventions should be delivered to effect change.

Citation

Stiles, S., Ryan, B., & Golightly, D. (2018). Readiness to Change: Perceptions of Safety Culture up and down the Supply Chain. In IEA 2018: Proceedings of the 20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association (IEA 2018) Volume II: Safety and Health, Slips, Trips and Falls (213-223). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96089-0_24

Conference Name 20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association
Conference Location Florence, Italy
Acceptance Date Aug 5, 2018
Publication Date Aug 5, 2018
Deposit Date Dec 10, 2018
Publisher Springer
Pages 213-223
Series Title Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing
Series Number 819
Book Title IEA 2018: Proceedings of the 20th Congress of the International Ergonomics Association (IEA 2018) Volume II: Safety and Health, Slips, Trips and Falls
ISBN 978-3-319-96088-3
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96089-0_24
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1222888
Publisher URL https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-96089-0_24