Mechanisms and Driving Forces of Safety Culture Co-Creation in the Forest Industry

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Mechanisms and Driving Forces of Safety Culture Co-Creation in the Forest Industry
Authors: Linden, Alina, 1997, Barth, Henrik, 1971, Ulvenblad, Pia, 1961, Karlsson, Elin, Rwamamara, Rom
Source: Safety. 11(2):1-18
Subject Terms: occupational safety, workplace safety, safety culture, co-creation, forest industry, paper industry, pulp industry, processing, manufacturing, Sweden
Description: The forest industry is one of the most dangerous workplaces worldwide, and although safety culture is recognized as important safety antecedent, there is still a theoretical and practical need for understanding how safety culture is co-created in the forest industry. To fill this gap, this article has the purpose of exploring mechanisms and driving forces of safety culture co-creation within the Swedish forest industry. Data is collected via on-site focus group interviews with 136 employees of a Swedish pulp- and paper factory. Data is analysed via thematic analysis. Results show that communication and engagement, safety training and knowledge sharing, reporting and risk management as well as integration of safety in daily operations are central safety culture co-creation mechanisms. Driving forces of safety culture co-creation driving forces are leadership commitment to safety, employee responsibility and collaboration, a continuous improvement mindset and work environment and psychosocial wellbeing. Central safety culture co-creation mechanisms and driving forces are identified in communication and interaction that span all individuals, teams, departments, organizational entities and hierarchical levels as basis for successful, sustainable and holistic safety culture co-creation. © 2025 by the authors.
File Description: electronic
Access URL: https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-56056
https://doi.org/10.3390/safety11020045
Database: SwePub
Description
Abstract:The forest industry is one of the most dangerous workplaces worldwide, and although safety culture is recognized as important safety antecedent, there is still a theoretical and practical need for understanding how safety culture is co-created in the forest industry. To fill this gap, this article has the purpose of exploring mechanisms and driving forces of safety culture co-creation within the Swedish forest industry. Data is collected via on-site focus group interviews with 136 employees of a Swedish pulp- and paper factory. Data is analysed via thematic analysis. Results show that communication and engagement, safety training and knowledge sharing, reporting and risk management as well as integration of safety in daily operations are central safety culture co-creation mechanisms. Driving forces of safety culture co-creation driving forces are leadership commitment to safety, employee responsibility and collaboration, a continuous improvement mindset and work environment and psychosocial wellbeing. Central safety culture co-creation mechanisms and driving forces are identified in communication and interaction that span all individuals, teams, departments, organizational entities and hierarchical levels as basis for successful, sustainable and holistic safety culture co-creation. © 2025 by the authors.
DOI:10.3390/safety11020045