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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Challenges influencing the safety of migrant workers in the construction industry: A qualitative study in Italy, Spain, and the UK
Rose ShepherdKarina NielsenMichela VignoliJosé M. PeiróLaura Lorentesubject
0211 other engineering and technologiesPoison control02 engineering and technologySafety standardsOccupational safety and healthPolitical scienceMigrant Workers021105 building & constructionInjury preventionTraining0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSafety Risk Reliability and Quality050107 human factorsQualitative ResearchConstructionbusiness.industryConstruction; Migrant Workers; Qualitative Research; Safety; Training05 social sciencesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHuman factors and ergonomicsPublic relationsFocus groupWorkforceSafetybusinessSafety ResearchQualitative researchdescription
Abstract The construction industry is notoriously high risk for accidents, injuries, and deaths, particularly for non-national or migrant workers, who comprise a significant proportion of the workforce. This paper presents an international, qualitative study focused on exploring the challenges which influence the safety of migrant construction workers in Italy, Spain, and the UK. Based on a comprehensive review of the literature, we formulated two research questions about the challenges relating to safety that migrant workers face and the challenges to safety training effectively improving migrant workers’ safety behaviours. We present our template analysis of semi-structured interviews and focus groups with 88 participants from four occupational groups across all three countries. This identified commonalities and differences in interpretations of the primary challenges to migrant workers’ safety, amongst participants from the various occupational groups (workers, site supervisors, safety trainers and safety experts) in Italy, Spain, and the UK. These were associated with: increased use of subcontractors; dilution of safety standards down the supply chain; pressure to breach safety regulations on site; differing safety-related attitudes and behaviours due to national cultural differences, language barriers and issues relating to training (provision, delivery, language, content and transfer). Finally, we summarise the contributions and limitations of our study, arguing further interventions related to safety training are needed, along with ethnographic studies to explore how both macro-level and contextual factors affect safety outcomes for migrant construction workers.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-10-01 |