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Index
Workplace Health and Safety
Contents
Tables
Figures
Acknowledgements
Notes on Contributors
Abbreviations
Introduction: Representing Workers on Health and Safety in the Modern World of Work
Representing workers on health and safety in the modern world of work
History
The model
Different experiences of worker representation
Changing times – some challenges, solutions and implications
Lessons of the past and messages for the future
Wider relevance
Notes
Part I National Arrangements for Workers’ Representation: Case Studies from Europe and Australia
1 Worker Representation on Health and Safety in the UK – Problems with the Preferred Model and Beyond
Health and safety arrangements in the UK
The preferred model in practice
Notes
2 The Australian Framework for Worker Participation in Occupational Health and Safety
Workplace participation provisions in the Australian OHS statutes
(a) The Northern Territory
(b) New South Wales
(c) Worker representation and participation in the other Australian OHS statutes
Health and safety committees
Research into the operation of the HSR and HSC provisions
Vesting HSRs with enforcement powers
Coverage of workers who are not ‘employees’
Union right of entry for OHS purposes
Conclusion
Notes
3 Health and Safety Committees in France: An Empirical Analysis
Conceptual model and empirical data
Labour pressure and managerial policy ease the setting up and working of the HSC (H1 and H8)
The existence of major risks favours the setting up of an HSC (H6)
HSCs are associated with a better quality of prevention (H7)
HSCs improve risk awareness (H4)
Conclusion
Notes
4 Characteristics, Activities and Perceptions of Spanish Safety Representatives
Safety representatives in Spanish workplaces
Objectives of the research
Methods
The qualitative study
The survey
Results
General characteristics of Spanish safety representatives
Activities carried out by Spanish safety representatives
Obstacles and supports
Risk perception
Health and safety management in the company
Discussion
Notes
5 An Afterword on European Union Policy and Practice
Workers’ safety representation and the development of EU policy
Workers’ health and safety and the legacy of 1960s radicalism
Developments at European level
The Framework Directive and worker representation
Workers’ representation in national prevention systems
A grey area in strategies … and research
Notes
Part II Challenges and Strategies for Worker Representation in the Modern World of Work
6 Precarious Employment and the Internal Responsibility System: Some Canadian Experiences
Worker health and safety representatives and the Internal Responsibility System in Canada
The Internal Responsibility System and precarious employment
The project
Characteristics of the sample by employment relationship and sex
Do workers in precarious employment face different work-related health and safety risks?
Can workers in precarious employment assert their right to know through health and safety training and access to information?
Can workers in precarious employment exercise their right to participate in health and safety matters at work?
Conclusions
Notes
7 Employee ‘Voice’ and Working Environment in the New Member States: Translating Policy into Practice in the Baltic States
Methodology
The post-Communist ‘Baltic Tigers’
Work intensification in the new market economies
Working conditions and perceived health impacts
Workforce voice in health and safety
Individualism and collectivism
Conclusion
Note
8 Health and Safety Representation in Small Firms: A Swedish Success that is Threatened by Political and Labour Market Changes
A full-scale support system for external worker representation on health and safety in small firms
The structure and function of the regional safety representative system
The origins and motivations for regional safety representatives
Regulatory requirements
Numbers and coverage
Different types of regional safety representative in different unions
Resourcing
Role
Why it works: The Swedish model of cooperation between social partners
Occupational health and safety issues are legitimate
Dialogue within the Swedish industrial relations model
Judgement and competence to achieve an insider dialogue
Formal rights and leverage over employers
The basis of the system erodes and difficulties mount
A reduced OHS infrastructure with less support from other actors for small firms
Eroding basis and support
Labour market and political changes weaken the position of workers
A globalised and flexible economy and labour market with less secure jobs
New job politics further increases job insecurity
Many more small firms, especially in private services, with few health and safety resources
Outsourcing reduces local OHS dialogue
More migrant workers, especially after EU enlargement
A similar increase in undocumented illegal labour
Foreign construction workers are frequently exposed to high OHS risks
Undocumented cleaners at the bottom of sub-contracting chains
More vulnerable workers in need of OHS-support
Labour market changes underline the original purpose of the regional safety representative system
Future developments
9 Trade Union Strategies to Support Representation on Health and Safety in Australia and the UK: Integration or Isolation?
Institutionalising the role of trades unions in workplace representation on health and safety in the UK and Australia: the development of a ‘preferred model’
The operation of trade union-supported representation on health and safety
Current limitations to the regulatory model
The scope and methods of the study
Trade union approaches to supporting safety representatives in the modern world of work: addressing the challenges
Health and safety and trade union organising
Health and safety, organising and the future of trade union representation on health and safety
Notes
10 Worker Representation and Health and Safety: Reflections on the Past, Present and Future
Rights of representation
Representative forms
Coverage of representative arrangements
Powers of representatives
Implementation of the legislative systems
Enhancing health and safety representation
Rights to representation
Mechanisms of enforcement
Linkages to wider employment relations structures
Future prospects
References
Index
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