Publication | Closed Access
Toward a theory of the linkages between safety and quality
177
Citations
62
References
2007
Year
Total Quality ManagementCustomer SatisfactionSupply Chain PerformanceEngineeringSafety ScienceSafety PolicyEmployee SafetyInjury PreventionHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorSafety ManagementSafety CultureRisk ManagementManagementSupply ChainHuman FactorsReliabilitySupply Chain ManagementOperations ManagementOrganizational SafetyMarketingBusiness
Abstract The role of employee safety in supply chain performance has inexplicably been overlooked by operations management literature. With a few notable exceptions, there is no guidance in the literature for operations managers trying to understand the role that employee safety at their own or a suppliers could play in quality outcomes. This manuscript takes a first step to rectify this oversight by using cognitive dissonance theory to build a series of propositions that link safety perceptions to quality outcomes. Empirical tests of these propositions provide initial evidence that safety does indeed contribute to quality outcomes in the supply chain.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1