Accident investigation and risk assessment have for decades focused on the human factor, particularly 'human error'. Countless books and papers have been written about how to identify, classify, eliminate, prevent and compen...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Accident investigation and risk assessment have for decades focused on the human factor, particularly 'human error'. Countless books and papers have been written about how to identify, classify, eliminate, prevent and compensate for it. This bias towards the study of performance failures, leads to a neglect of normal or 'error-free' performance and the assumption that as failures and successes have different origins there is little to be gained from studying them together. Erik Hollnagel believes this assumption is false and that safety cannot be attained only by eliminating risks and failures. The ETTO Principle looks at the common trait of people at work to adjust what they do to match the conditions - to what has happened, to what happens, and to what may happen. It proposes that this efficiency-thoroughness trade-off (ETTO) - usually sacrificing thoroughness for efficiency - is normal. While in some cases the adjustments may lead to adverse outcomes, these are due to the very same processes that produce successes, rather than to errors and malfunctions. The ETTO Principle removes the need for specialised theories and models of failure and 'human error' and offers a viable basis for effective and just approaches to both reactive and proactive safety management.

Similar Products

Pre-Accident Investigations: An Introduction to Organizational SafetySafety-I and Safety-II: The Past and Future of Safety ManagementPre-Accident Investigations: Better Questions - An Applied Approach to Operational LearningThe Field Guide to Understanding 'Human Error'Just Culture: Restoring Trust and Accountability in Your Organization, Third EditionJust Culture: Balancing Safety and AccountabilityThe Human Contribution: Unsafe Acts, Accidents and Heroic RecoveriesManaging the Unexpected: Sustained Performance in a Complex WorldSafety Differently: Human Factors for a New Era, Second EditionResilience Engineering: Concepts and Precepts