1st Edition

Corruption and the Management of Public Safety The Governance of Technological Systems

By Simon Ashley Bennett Copyright 2024
242 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

242 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

242 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Graft is a common and persistent social pathogen that afflicts the developed and developing world in equal measure. This book describes, through the medium of international case studies, how graft undermines public safety and how, following a near-miss, incident or accident, investigators can use actor-network theory (ANT) to ascertain to what degree and through what mechanisms graft contributed... Read more

List of figures

List of tables

Preface

Acknowledgements

 

1 Introduction: The impact on public safety of corruption

2 Data, definition of terms, method, theory and presentation

3 Case studies

3.1 Nuclear soldiers

3.2 The Marine Electric loss

3.3 The Hillsborough football stadium disaster

3.4 The Adam Air disaster

3.5 The Volkswagen emissions scandal

3.6 The Grenfell Tower disaster

3.7 The Beirut ammonium nitrate explosion

4 Conclusions

5 Policy recommendations

Glossary

Bibliography

Biography

Simon Ashley Bennett teaches risk management at the University of Leicester, England. He is interested in the organisational, social, economic and political origins of risk. For example, loss of organisational memory, mindlessness, groupthink, corruption, political instability, terrorism and war. He is a member of the Air Safety Group of the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety. His books include Systems-thinking for Safety (2019) and Atomic Blackmail? The Weaponisation of Nuclear Facilities during the Russia-Ukraine War (2023).