ABSTRACT

This book takes a fresh look at safety decision-making by documenting and examining stories told by front-line managers in three different high-hazard industries: a chemical plant, a nuclear power station and an air-navigation service provider. From Piper Alpha to Deepwater Horizon, accident analysis has stressed the importance of excellent decision-making by those in charge out in the field. Organizations rely critically on the judgement and experience of such senior operations personnel and yet these qualities are undervalued in a business environment that emphasises documentation and measurement. Whilst operational managers are guided by rules, they also draw on their own long experience and can formulate a situation-specific ’line in the sand’ to apply the experience of the operating team to complex, real-world situations that rule writers may not have foreseen. This volume refocuses our attention on the people who make these important decisions and the organizational processes that support the best choices. Jan Hayes uses her multi-disciplinary experience to draw together an account of safety decision-making that is both technically robust and yet accessible to academics, practitioners and regulators alike. Readers will see that the stories retold in this book provide a way for operational managers to share their knowledge, experience and expertise - with each other and with us.

chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

part A|4 pages

Decision-Making in Three High Reliability Organizations

part B|2 pages

Acting Both as Employees and as Professionals

chapter 6|18 pages

Decision-making and Identity

chapter 7|12 pages

Rules and Compliance

chapter 8|14 pages

Professionals at Work

chapter 9|12 pages

Professional Relationships

chapter 10|12 pages

Decisions, Risks and Barriers