Psychosocial risks constitute a significant problem in most workplaces, and they are generally
considered more difficult to regulate than many other occupational health and safety risks. This
article investigates the challenges of regulating psychosocial risks in the workplace. The difficulties
lie in the particular nature of psychosocial risks: their complexity, uncertainty, value, and power
divergences. Psychosocial risks therefore resemble ?wicked problems?, typically characterized by
unclear cause-effect relationships and uncertain solutions. We use the ?wicked problems? concept
to show how workplace regulation, and particularly the enforcement in the form of inspection and
audits of certified occupational health and safety management systems, face challenges in assessing
psychosocial risks and the strategies used by regulators to overcome these challenges. While
regulation has become more effective in several countries, a better understanding of the nature
of the challenges is still needed. It is necessary to accept the uncertain nature of psychosocial
risks in the search for more efficient regulation. Achieving more effective regulation should involve
stakeholders in the workplace who deal with the prerogatives of management, and should help
develop the competencies of the inspectors and auditors in the field.
Forfatterbiografier
Anne Helbo Jespersen, Bureau Veritas Denmark, and Center for Industrial Production, Aalborg University
Industrial PhD candidate
Peter Hasle, Center for Industrial Production, Aalborg University
Professor, PhD
Klaus T. Nielsen, Department of People and Technology, Roskilde University