Publication | Open Access
Social identity, safety climate and self-reported accidents among construction workers
75
Citations
48
References
2017
Year
EngineeringSocial PsychologySafety ScienceSelf IdentityInjury PreventionOccupational HazardsOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyOccupational Health And SafetyBuilt EnvironmentSafety ManagementConstruction WorkersSocial IdentityWork SafetyHuman SafetyApplied Social PsychologyOccupational SafetyOrganizational SafetyConstruction SiteSociologyConstruction Management
The construction industry has one of the highest frequencies of work-related accidents. We examined whether construction workers predominantly identify themselves in terms of their workgroup or in terms of the construction site. In addition, we examined the associations between social identity and safety climate, and how these constructs are associated with work-related accidents. The analyses were based on questionnaire responses from 478 construction workers from two large construction sites, and the methods involved structural equation modeling. Results showed that the workers identified themselves primarily with their workgroup, and to a lesser degree with the construction site. Social identity and safety climate were related both at the workgroup and construction site levels, meaning that social identity may be an antecedent for safety climate. The association between social identity and safety climate was stronger at the workgroup level than at the construction site level. Finally, safety climate at both levels was inversely associated with self-reported accidents, with the strongest association at the workgroup level. A focus on improving safety climate, particularly by integrating initiatives at both the workgroup and management level, may have the potential to improve safety performance and thus decrease the risk of accidents and injuries on construction sites.
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