Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting

Defined in the organizational behavior literature as employee avoidance of expressing their feelings, thoughts and ideas, the concept of organizational silence refers to the failure to submit reports voluntarily in the context of aviation safety. Due to various factors, aviation employees may avoid...

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Main Authors: Ilker Under, Ender Gerede
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2021-09-01
Series:Aviation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mla.vgtu.lt/index.php/Aviation/article/view/14540
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spelling doaj-1923d45506d04f418564f7891727575e2021-09-29T15:02:45ZengVilnius Gediminas Technical UniversityAviation1648-77881822-41802021-09-0125310.3846/aviation.2021.14540Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reportingIlker Under0Ender Gerede1Graduate School of Social Science, Anadolu University, Eskisehir, TurkeyFaculty of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Eskisehir Technical University, Eskisehir, Turkey Defined in the organizational behavior literature as employee avoidance of expressing their feelings, thoughts and ideas, the concept of organizational silence refers to the failure to submit reports voluntarily in the context of aviation safety. Due to various factors, aviation employees may avoid reporting. However, managers need voluntary reports from their employees to prevent future accidents. The primary purpose of this study is to find out why air traffic controllers, one of the most critical safety components of flight operation, fail to do voluntary reporting. In addition, whether controllers are involved in real-life voluntary reporting and whether the factors that prevent voluntary reporting vary by demographic variables. The data collected from 212 controllers were subjected to Confirmatory Factor Analysis by using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) 24 program and the reasons for their failure to do voluntary reporting were identified. Furthermore, the study concluded that approximately 27% of controllers did not submit voluntary reporting on unsafe situations or safety-enhancing recommendations they had seen. https://www.mla.vgtu.lt/index.php/Aviation/article/view/14540aviationvoluntary reportingsafety management systemair traffic controlorganizational silencehuman factors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ilker Under
Ender Gerede
spellingShingle Ilker Under
Ender Gerede
Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
Aviation
aviation
voluntary reporting
safety management system
air traffic control
organizational silence
human factors
author_facet Ilker Under
Ender Gerede
author_sort Ilker Under
title Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
title_short Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
title_full Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
title_fullStr Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
title_full_unstemmed Silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
title_sort silence in the tower: analysing the reasons of air traffic controllers avoiding voluntary reporting
publisher Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
series Aviation
issn 1648-7788
1822-4180
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Defined in the organizational behavior literature as employee avoidance of expressing their feelings, thoughts and ideas, the concept of organizational silence refers to the failure to submit reports voluntarily in the context of aviation safety. Due to various factors, aviation employees may avoid reporting. However, managers need voluntary reports from their employees to prevent future accidents. The primary purpose of this study is to find out why air traffic controllers, one of the most critical safety components of flight operation, fail to do voluntary reporting. In addition, whether controllers are involved in real-life voluntary reporting and whether the factors that prevent voluntary reporting vary by demographic variables. The data collected from 212 controllers were subjected to Confirmatory Factor Analysis by using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) 24 program and the reasons for their failure to do voluntary reporting were identified. Furthermore, the study concluded that approximately 27% of controllers did not submit voluntary reporting on unsafe situations or safety-enhancing recommendations they had seen.
topic aviation
voluntary reporting
safety management system
air traffic control
organizational silence
human factors
url https://www.mla.vgtu.lt/index.php/Aviation/article/view/14540
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