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2015

Industrial safety--Law and legislation

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Remapping Worker Citizenship In Contemporary Occupational Health And Safety Regimes, Eric Tucker Feb 2015

Remapping Worker Citizenship In Contemporary Occupational Health And Safety Regimes, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

The article draws on the rapidly growing field of citizenship studies to map and explore the dynamics of contemporary occupational health and safety (OHS) regulation. Using two key dimensions of OHS regulation (protection and participation), the author constructs four ideal types of worker citizenship (market, public, private industrial, and public industrial citizens). Historically, workers have been written into OHS regulatory regimes in each of these ways. Most recently lawmakers have created a new species of OHS regimes, best described as mandated partial self-regulation. Its distinguishing characteristic is its flexibility, such that worker citizenship can take on any of the forms …


Worker Health And Safety Struggles: Democratic Possibilities And Constraints, Eric Tucker Feb 2015

Worker Health And Safety Struggles: Democratic Possibilities And Constraints, Eric Tucker

Eric M. Tucker

The central point of this article, written in 1995, was that health and safety struggles can be at the vanguard of challenges to a legal social order that tolerates poor labour standards and high levels of worker exploitation. Workers who fear their work is making them sick or subjecting them to high levels of injury and disablement know first-hand that the values of democracy, autonomy, equality and community are denied and not realized by current arrangements. By drawing on that experience and explicitly linking health and safety demands to an alternative vision of social justice, one in which workers enjoy …


Death By Consensus: The Westray Story, Eric Tucker, Harry Glasbeek Feb 2015

Death By Consensus: The Westray Story, Eric Tucker, Harry Glasbeek

Eric M. Tucker

The paper will proceed as follows. It tells the Westray story in two parts, first, the decision to set up the mine and, second, the operation of the mine. These events illuminate the salience of the broader political economic context to an understanding of what happened. Further, the story gives the lie to the assumptions which underpin health and safety regulation. Next, the paper details the implications of the political economy and the prevailing ideology for the enforcement of health and safety regulation. The paper then critically examines a component of, or prop for, the consensus theory which postulates that …