The sociological consequences of environmental disasters on workers' safety perceptions in high-risk environments
Authors/Creators
- 1. Independent Health, Safety, and Environment (HSE) Expart
Description
Environmental disasters—ranging from industrial accidents to natural calamities—exert profound effects not only on physical infrastructures but also on the social fabric of affected workforces. While existing literature predominantly emphasizes tangible damages, less attention has been directed toward understanding how such events influence workers’ perceptions of safety through sociological lenses. This qualitative inquiry investigates the social and psychological ramifications of environmental disasters on worker safety perceptions within high-risk industries. Using semi-structured interviews analyzed through thematic coding, the study reveals that disasters serve as pivotal social events that can heighten safety awareness, bolster organizational trust—when managed transparently—or foster fatalism, distrust, and desensitization if responses are inadequate. These insights underscore the necessity for safety strategies that incorporate sociocultural and psychological considerations, fostering resilient safety cultures capable of withstanding disaster-induced social upheavals.
Files
WJARR-2025-2881.pdf
Files
(450.3 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:31cd21f0fe26a2c5ed62f7fc4dc50ee3
|
450.3 kB | Preview Download |