Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites

Significant attempts have been made by large contractors in the UK construction industry to improve safety on their sites. Safety management systems have been put in place, minimum training requirements have been established, and worker engagement initiatives implemented in the quest for a positive...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sherratt, Felicity Sarah
Published: University of Bolton 2012
Subjects:
624
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.655867
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-655867
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6558672017-04-20T03:22:07ZConstructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sitesSherratt, Felicity Sarah2012Significant attempts have been made by large contractors in the UK construction industry to improve safety on their sites. Safety management systems have been put in place, minimum training requirements have been established, and worker engagement initiatives implemented in the quest for a positive safety culture. However accidents and incidents still occur. Grounded in social constructionism, this study sought to explore how people construct safety in and through their interactions at work on the large construction sites of the UK. Data was collected from five UK construction projects, all over £20m in value, and included site safety signage, conversations discussing safety and various safety documents. Discourse analysis of the data revealed considerable variation in the contextual constructions of safety. Safety was found to be inconsistent, incomplete and incidental, relating to a variety of different realities in a variety of different contexts. Relatively straightforward constructs and discourses developed around safety, such as its polarisation, the construction of safety as PPE itself, and the development of safety as un-safety. However these were further developed by more complicated and interrelated discourses of safety as practice, enforcement and engagement. The variation within and between these master discourses has consequences for safety culture in terms of its construction, homogenisation and perpetuation on sites. The study makes recommendations for further academic research to examine the variation in the discourses of safety within the management hierarchy, who seek to develop a safe work environment through the safety culture programmes yet are challenged by the conflicts of safety as engagement and safety as enforcement. The study also suggests industry interventions to facilitate the improvement and development of practices to assist safety management on large UK construction sites.624University of Boltonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.655867http://ubir.bolton.ac.uk/593/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 624
spellingShingle 624
Sherratt, Felicity Sarah
Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites
description Significant attempts have been made by large contractors in the UK construction industry to improve safety on their sites. Safety management systems have been put in place, minimum training requirements have been established, and worker engagement initiatives implemented in the quest for a positive safety culture. However accidents and incidents still occur. Grounded in social constructionism, this study sought to explore how people construct safety in and through their interactions at work on the large construction sites of the UK. Data was collected from five UK construction projects, all over £20m in value, and included site safety signage, conversations discussing safety and various safety documents. Discourse analysis of the data revealed considerable variation in the contextual constructions of safety. Safety was found to be inconsistent, incomplete and incidental, relating to a variety of different realities in a variety of different contexts. Relatively straightforward constructs and discourses developed around safety, such as its polarisation, the construction of safety as PPE itself, and the development of safety as un-safety. However these were further developed by more complicated and interrelated discourses of safety as practice, enforcement and engagement. The variation within and between these master discourses has consequences for safety culture in terms of its construction, homogenisation and perpetuation on sites. The study makes recommendations for further academic research to examine the variation in the discourses of safety within the management hierarchy, who seek to develop a safe work environment through the safety culture programmes yet are challenged by the conflicts of safety as engagement and safety as enforcement. The study also suggests industry interventions to facilitate the improvement and development of practices to assist safety management on large UK construction sites.
author Sherratt, Felicity Sarah
author_facet Sherratt, Felicity Sarah
author_sort Sherratt, Felicity Sarah
title Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites
title_short Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites
title_full Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites
title_fullStr Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites
title_full_unstemmed Constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large UK construction sites
title_sort constructing safety on sites : an exploration of the social construction of safety on large uk construction sites
publisher University of Bolton
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.655867
work_keys_str_mv AT sherrattfelicitysarah constructingsafetyonsitesanexplorationofthesocialconstructionofsafetyonlargeukconstructionsites
_version_ 1718440105186689024