TY - JOUR PY - 1995// TI - Incident Reviews in High-Hazard Industries: Sense Making and Learning Under Ambiguity and Accountability JO - Industrial and environmental crisis quarterly A1 - Carroll, Jason S. SP - 175 EP - 197 VL - 9 IS - 2 N2 - Learning from practical experience is of greater importance in more complex work environments. In high-hazard industries, complexity, tight coupling, and invisibility make safe operation and learning from experience particularly difficult. There is growing recognition that further improvement is needed and that it will require more than incremental improvement and exchange of "best practices." This article describes how organization members make sense of practical experience in one high-hazard industry--nuclear power--and how their sense-making affects their decisions and actions. The author discusses four factors that can limit the effectiveness of the interpretive process: root cause seduction, sharp-end focus, solution-driven search, and account acceptability. He then examines the impact that myopic interpretations can have on operating performance by placing incident reviews within the organizational learning process, and he closes with suggestions for a cross-disciplinary research agenda.
LA - SN - 1087-0172 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/108602669500900203 ID - ref1 ER -