Developing smart and safe organizations: an evolutionary approach
- Resource Type
- Academic Journal
- Authors
- Gotcheva, Nadezhda; Watts, Germaine; Oedewald, Pia
- Source
- International Journal of Organizational Analysis, 2013, Vol. 21, Issue 1, pp. 83-97.
- Subject
- e-conceptual-paper
Conceptual paper
cat-HOB
HR & organizational behaviour
cat-OSD
Organizational structure/dynamics
Organizations
Leadership
Evolution
Continuous improvement
Propensities
Health and safety
Safety‐critical organizations
Continual improvement
Organizational performance
- Language
- English
- ISSN
- 1934-8835
This paper proposes an evolutionary approach to developing smart and safe organizations based on an alignment of two frameworks, an integrated safety culture model and an intelligent organizational systems model. It argues that diversity of propensities, defined as innate tendencies in individuals or groups to behave in particular ways shapes the potential for growth and evolution of organizations. It highlights the critical role of human systems and leadership in maintaining coherence and dealing with the challenges of increased complexity as organizations evolve.
The paper aligns the Intelligent Organizational Systems (IOS) evolutionary model and the Design for Integrated Safety Culture (DISC) model to describe evolutionary development of safety practice in organizations. The result is an ‘evolution matrix’, that reveal the links between safety performance and organizational evolution.
Development of an organization's capacity for safety consciousness through diversification of propensities and different cohering leadership capabilities gives organizations a new way of improving safety.
The evolution matrix can be used by leaders to systematically assess and enhance system capacity for addressing safety challenges.
The paper represents the first attempt at exploring the conscious development of safety‐critical organizations from an evolutionary perspective. It advances understanding of how organizations can evolve safely within ever‐changing environments.