Journal article
The law and order debate in OHS
F Haines, A Hall
Journal of Occupational Health and Safety Australia and New Zealand | Published : 2004
Abstract
Internationally there has been a shift towards greater criminalisation of breaches of OHS responsibilities, particularly when a death results. This new criminalisation in the form of revised manslaughter provisions is argued to potentially have important deterrent effects that could improve health and safety at work. However, the evidence that offences such as industrial manslaughter will act as a deterrent to those tolerating or explicitly condoning poor industrial health and safety standards is not strong. The following article reviews this evidence and then explores the expressive and symbolic dimension of the criminal law-elements often overlooked in discussions of organisational crimina..
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