Regulating Health and Safety in Capitalist Workplaces: History, Practices and Prospects

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Author/contributor
Title
Regulating Health and Safety in Capitalist Workplaces: History, Practices and Prospects
Abstract
... Occupational health and safety regulation sits atop these structures of risk creation and distribution and historically has been shaped by the struggles of working people to limit the harm that unbridled capitalism would have otherwise inflicted upon them. The results, which are the subject of this chapter, have varied over time and place, and have secured real improvements for some workers. Given space limitations, the remainder of this chapter focuses on OHS regulation in advanced capitalist countries, with a concentration on the English-speaking world. The next section outlines the broad lines of the historical development of OHS regulation, beginning from the rise of industrial capitalism in the early nineteenth century through to the last decades of the twentieth century and the creation of a new mode of regulation, variously called regulated selfregulation or mandated partial self-regulation. The following section considers various debates over the performance of that regime, including the relation between self-regulation and state enforcement, the practice of state enforcement and the efficacy of worker participation rights. Finally, the last section of the chapter examines emerging OHS challenges to the regulatory regime. --From introduction
Publisher
Osgoode Digital Commons
Date
2023
Language
English
Short Title
Regulating Health and Safety in Capitalist Workplaces
Accessed
3/1/24, 12:18 AM
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Citation
Tucker, E. (2023). Regulating Health and Safety in Capitalist Workplaces: History, Practices and Prospects. Osgoode Digital Commons. https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/all_papers/364/