Safety culture and power: Interactions between perceptions of safety culture, organisational hierarchy, and national culture

被引:47
|
作者
Tear, Morgan J. [1 ,4 ]
Reader, Tom W. [1 ]
Shorrock, Steven [2 ,3 ]
Kirwan, Barry [2 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Psychol & Behav Sci, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England
[2] EUROCONTROL, Bretiny Sur Orge, France
[3] Univ Sunshine Coast, Ctr Human Factors & Sociotech Syst, Sunshine Coast, Australia
[4] Monash Univ, Monash Sustainable Dev Inst, Behav Works Australia, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
关键词
Safety culture; Power distance; National culture; Values; Organisational culture; Hierarchy; PATIENT SAFETY; CLIMATE; MODEL; PERFORMANCE; MANAGERS; SPEAKING; VALUES; LEVEL; METAANALYSIS; LEADERSHIP;
D O I
10.1016/j.ssci.2018.10.014
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Practices that involve power dynamics are integral to maintaining organisational safety (e.g. speaking-up, challenging poor behaviour, admitting error, communicating on safety), and staff engagement in these is assumed to be shaped by perceptions of safety culture. These perceptions, in-turn, are associated with (1) positions within an organisational hierarchy (which makes power-related acts more or less threatening), and (2) societal values for power distance (e.g. challenging authority). With a sample of 13,573 of air traffic control staff (controllers, engineers, administrative, and management) from 21 national air traffic providers, we reconfirm the observation that managers perceive safety culture more positively than frontline staff (hypothesis 1), and that workers in countries with established values for hierarchy and power report safety culture as less positive than those from countries with low power distance (hypothesis 2). We then, for the first time, examine the interaction between these two factors, and establish that differences in safety culture perceptions between those higher in the hierarchy (management) and those lower in the hierarchy (air traffic controllers and administrative staff) are exacerbated by national contexts for large power distance (hypothesis 3). The study contributes to the literature by theorising the role of power in safety culture theory, and its influence upon safety culture perceptions. Moving forward, safety culture research and interventions may benefit from considering how power exists and manifests at the level of superior-subordinate dynamics.
引用
收藏
页码:550 / 561
页数:12
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