Young adult workers aged 18?24 years have the highest risk of accidents at work. Following the
work of Bourdieu and Tannock, we demonstrate that young adult workers are a highly differentiated
group. Accordingly, safety prevention among young adult workers needs to be nuanced
in ways that take into consideration the different positions and conditions under which young
adult workers are employed. Based on single and group interviews with 26 young adult workers
from six various sized supermarkets, we categorize young adult retail workers into the following
five distinct groups: ?Skilled workers,? ?Apprentices,? ?Sabbatical year workers,? ?Student workers,? and
?School dropouts.? We argue that exposure to accidental risk is not equally distributed among them
and offer an insight into the narratives of young adult workers on the subject of risk situations at
work. The categorizations are explored and expanded according to the situated ways of ?doing?
risk and safety in the working practices of the adult workers. We suggest that the understanding
of ?young? as an age-related biological category might explain why approaches to prevent accidents
among young employees first and foremost include individual factors like advice, information,
and supervision and to a lesser degree the structural and cultural environment wherein they
are embedded. We conclude that age cannot stand alone as the only factor in safety prevention
directed at workers aged 18?24 years; if we do so, there is a risk of overemphasizing age-related
individual characteristics such as awareness and cognitive limitations before structural, relational,
and hierarchical dimensions at the workplace.
Author Biographies
Mette Lykke Nielsen, The Danish Centre for Youth Research, Department of Learning and Philosophy, Aalborg University
Post. doc., MSc, Ph.D.
Johnny Dyreborg, The National Research Centre for the Working Environment
Senior researcher, MSc Sociology, Ph.D.
Pete Kines, The National Research Centre for the Working Environment
Senior researcher, MSc Psychology, Ph.D.
Kent J. Nielsen, Danish Ramazzini Center, Department of Occupational Medicine, Herning Regional Hospital
Deputy Manager, MSc Psychology, Ph.D.
Kurt Rasmussen, Danish Ramazzini Center, Department of Occupational Medicine, Herning Regional Hospital