Workers’ Perceptions of Safety Climate in International Construction Projects: Effects of Nationality, Religious Belief, and Employment Mode

AbstractSafety management has emerged as an important topic in the construction industry. The safety climate serves as an outline of the basic safety culture’s features and forewarns on safety-related problems. This study aims to investigate safety climate information in international construction p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of construction engineering and management 2017-04, Vol.143 (4)
Hauptverfasser: Gao, Ran, Chan, Albert P. C, Utama, Wahyudi P, Zahoor, Hafiz
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container_issue 4
container_start_page
container_title Journal of construction engineering and management
container_volume 143
creator Gao, Ran
Chan, Albert P. C
Utama, Wahyudi P
Zahoor, Hafiz
description AbstractSafety management has emerged as an important topic in the construction industry. The safety climate serves as an outline of the basic safety culture’s features and forewarns on safety-related problems. This study aims to investigate safety climate information in international construction projects, and find out specific factors affecting perceptions of safety climate in an international context. A questionnaire survey was administered on five construction sites contracted by Chinese international contractors. A total of 571 valid questionnaires were collected from this survey. Hierarchical logistic regression analysis reveals that nationality, religious beliefs, and employment mode can significantly affect perceptions of safety climate from different facets. In the present case, Chinese workers tend to have more positive perceptions of safety climate than their Vietnamese coworkers. Workers with religious beliefs tend to have more positive perceptions of safety climate than those without such beliefs. Finally, workers employed by subcontractors tend to have more positive perceptions of the safety climate than those employed directly by the main contractor. The findings identify the crucial factors affecting safety climate, which in turn enable practitioners to create a positive safety culture to enhance safety performance in international construction projects.
doi_str_mv 10.1061/(ASCE)CO.1943-7862.0001226
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source American Society of Civil Engineers:NESLI2:Journals:2014
subjects Climate
Construction industry
Contractors
Culture
Employment
Perception
Safety
Surveys
Technical Papers
title Workers’ Perceptions of Safety Climate in International Construction Projects: Effects of Nationality, Religious Belief, and Employment Mode
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