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Learning from organizational incidents: Resilience engineering for high‐risk process environments
Author(s) -
Huber Stefanie,
van Wijgerden Ivette,
de Witt Arjan,
Dekker Sidney W.A.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
process safety progress
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.378
H-Index - 40
eISSN - 1547-5913
pISSN - 1066-8527
DOI - 10.1002/prs.10286
Subject(s) - process safety , audit , process (computing) , resilience (materials science) , risk analysis (engineering) , engineering , risk management , near miss , adaptation (eye) , safety culture , organizational learning , process safety management , production (economics) , process management , operations management , business , knowledge management , work in process , computer science , forensic engineering , management , psychology , macroeconomics , operating system , accounting , thermodynamics , physics , finance , neuroscience , economics , waste management , hazardous waste
Abstract For years, safety improvements have been made by evaluating incident reports and analyzing errors and violations. Current developments in safety science, however, challenge the idea that safety can meaningfully be seen as the absence of errors or other negatives. Instead, the question becomes whether a company is aware of positive ways in which people, at all level of the organization, contribute to the management and containment of the risks it actually faces. The question, too, is whether the organization has the adaptive capacity necessary to respond to the changing nature of risk as operations shift and evolve. This article presents the results of a resilience engineering safety audit conducted on a chemical company site. An interdisciplinary team of seven researchers carried out 4 days of field studies and interviews in several plants on this site. This company enjoyed an almost incident‐free recent history but turned out to be ill‐equiped to handle future risks and many well‐known daily problems. Safety was often borrowed from to meet acute production goals. Organizational learning from incidents was fragmented into small organizational or production units without a company‐wide learning. We conclude that improving safety performance hinges on an organization's dynamic capacity to reflect on and modify its models of risk as operations and insight into them evolve, for example, as they are embodied in safety procedures and policies. © 2008 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Process Saf Prog 2009