A review of safety culture theory and its potential application to traffic safety.

Author(s)
Wiegmann, D.A. Thaden, T.L. von & Gibbons, A.M.
Year
Abstract

Over the past several years, organizations in high-risk industries such as nuclear power and aviation have become increasingly aware of the role that safety culture plays in shaping reliable and safe operations. As a result, safety professionals working in other industries and transportation modalities such as manufacturing, construction, chemical and petroleum processing, and traffic safety have also begun contemplating the role that safety culture might play in mitigating risk within these settings. The purpose of this chapter, therefore, is to (1) briefly review and synthesize previous safety culture literature, (2) discuss the challenges of moving beyond safety culture as simply an intuitive explanation of accidents to actual measurement and change, and (3) analyze the similarities and differences between traffic-safety systems and other high-risk industries that may impact the applicability of the safety-culture concept across these domains. The paper concludes with recommendations for future research on the topic of safety culture as applied to traffic safety.

Publication

Library number
C 42634 (In: C 39405 [electronic version only])
Source

In: Improving traffic safety culture in the United States : the journey forward, AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, 2007, p. 113-129

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.