Construction Health and Safety Self-Regulation in Developing Countries: A Nigeria Case Study

Authors

  • Nnedinma Umeokafor University of Greenwich, United Kingdom
  • David Isaac University of Greenwich, United Kingdom

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37265/japiv.v8i1.45

Keywords:

Approaches, attitude, construction, health and safety (H&S), Nigeria, self-regulation

Abstract

The study reported in this paper explored the self-regulatory approaches in terms of health and safety (H&S) in the Nigerian construction industry and the attitudes of the industry towards H&S self-regulation. This stems from the premise that the Nigerian construction industry has been viewed as unregulated, but evidence in literature indicates that some parts of the industry are self-regulated in various forms. However, it is unclear how self-regulation occurs in the industry, its approaches and the attitudes of the industry towards it. Based on group and individual interviews, there is evidence of self-regulation that is: enforced, industry-led, voluntary, H&S crusader-led, client-led and community-led. It was revealed that in many cases, when self-regulation is voluntary, the self-regulatory process does not exceed the first stage of self-regulation, adopting or developing standards. The attitudes of the industry towards H&S self-regulation can be described as not limited to “camouflage,” “convenience,” “context-defined,” “secondary,” “unstructured,” and “tick box.” However, there are some in the industry that have a favorable attitude towards H&S where it is “primary” in their organization. The understanding of self-regulation and H&S is advanced in this study, especially in developing countries, which policymakers, socio-legal scholars, practitioners, academics, and various industries may find beneficial.

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Published

2016-06-01

How to Cite

Umeokafor, N., & Isaac, D. (2016). Construction Health and Safety Self-Regulation in Developing Countries: A Nigeria Case Study. Journal for the Advancement of Performance Information and Value, 8(1), 3–1 . https://doi.org/10.37265/japiv.v8i1.45