Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture

Cultures are usually defined as shared values, attitudes and behaviour of certain group. The core of culture is inside person’s mind. Only through behaviour or other actions of persons the culture becomes visible and shareable. Cultural artefacts and all other perceptible signs of culture are formed...

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Main Author: Pasi Porkka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2016-04-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3437
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spelling doaj-0b65064ddaf84aa8a7b7c57f985186d12021-02-19T21:12:19ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162016-04-014810.3303/CET1648152Functional Model for Organisational and Safety CulturePasi PorkkaCultures are usually defined as shared values, attitudes and behaviour of certain group. The core of culture is inside person’s mind. Only through behaviour or other actions of persons the culture becomes visible and shareable. Cultural artefacts and all other perceptible signs of culture are formed through action. From this perspective culture requires functionality. It does not exist nor spread without activity of individuals. In systems theory there is a methodological distinction between theoretical system and empirical system. Theoretical system “is a complex of concepts, suppositions, and propositions having both logical integration and empirical reference”. Empirical system is “a set of phenomena in the observable world that is amenable to description and analysis by means of a theoretical system”. However, in cultural context, theoretical models usually describe only properties of the empirical system. Usually the functionality of the culture is left undefined. Therefore theoretical models may have flaws in their ability to describe the functionality of the culture, which is essential part of the culture. In this paper we use a novel functional model to explore the functionality of the most commonly used culture models. We inspect Schein’s organizational culture model, Cooper’s reciprocal safety culture model and Johnson’s cultural web. We study them and their functionality with our own functional model, which integrates person to sociotechnical system and shows person-sociotechnical system interaction. This study clearly shows that if culture’s basis is in shared mental models, then the question whether organization is or has culture is absurd. As Antonsen has pointed out certain mandatory organizational features are clearly structural and not cultural. We also emphasize the behavioural aspect when defining cultural issues. The shared mental model alone is not sufficient requirement to define a feature as a cultural artefact, nor is the behaviour all employees share. Behaviour or action is cultural artefact only when the members of the culture have truly free will to choose their behaviour.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3437
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pasi Porkka
spellingShingle Pasi Porkka
Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet Pasi Porkka
author_sort Pasi Porkka
title Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture
title_short Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture
title_full Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture
title_fullStr Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture
title_full_unstemmed Functional Model for Organisational and Safety Culture
title_sort functional model for organisational and safety culture
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Cultures are usually defined as shared values, attitudes and behaviour of certain group. The core of culture is inside person’s mind. Only through behaviour or other actions of persons the culture becomes visible and shareable. Cultural artefacts and all other perceptible signs of culture are formed through action. From this perspective culture requires functionality. It does not exist nor spread without activity of individuals. In systems theory there is a methodological distinction between theoretical system and empirical system. Theoretical system “is a complex of concepts, suppositions, and propositions having both logical integration and empirical reference”. Empirical system is “a set of phenomena in the observable world that is amenable to description and analysis by means of a theoretical system”. However, in cultural context, theoretical models usually describe only properties of the empirical system. Usually the functionality of the culture is left undefined. Therefore theoretical models may have flaws in their ability to describe the functionality of the culture, which is essential part of the culture. In this paper we use a novel functional model to explore the functionality of the most commonly used culture models. We inspect Schein’s organizational culture model, Cooper’s reciprocal safety culture model and Johnson’s cultural web. We study them and their functionality with our own functional model, which integrates person to sociotechnical system and shows person-sociotechnical system interaction. This study clearly shows that if culture’s basis is in shared mental models, then the question whether organization is or has culture is absurd. As Antonsen has pointed out certain mandatory organizational features are clearly structural and not cultural. We also emphasize the behavioural aspect when defining cultural issues. The shared mental model alone is not sufficient requirement to define a feature as a cultural artefact, nor is the behaviour all employees share. Behaviour or action is cultural artefact only when the members of the culture have truly free will to choose their behaviour.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3437
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