Transcript Document

Safety and Risk in Residence
Abroad
John Canning and Vicky Wright
Subject Centre for Languages,
Linguistics and Area Studies
University of Southampton
Why is safety and risk an
issue?
• We recognise that students take risks and
gain from them.
• Students may take risks to increase their
intercultural competence.
• Recognition of hazards and calculation of
risk means risk can be decreased
• Risk assessment may provide useful legal
evidence.
Duty of care
• “The duty which rests upon an
individual or organisation to ensure
that all reasonable steps are taken to
ensure the safety of any person
involved in any activity for which that
individual or organisation is
responsible.” (British Canoe
Association website).
Duty of Care (2)
• “The legal obligation to take
reasonable care to avoid causing
damage. Doctors have a duty of care,
as do drivers to other road users, and
solicitors to their clients. A breach of
duty of care can give risk of a civil
claim for negligence.” (Cutts 1992: 7172).
Beyond a ‘duty of care’
• RA is a marketing tool.
• HEIs are service providers- students
customers.
• Service providers have obligationscustomers rights.
Understanding and
assessing risk.
Risks and Hazards
• Hazard: anything that can cause harm.
• Risk: chance, high or low, that
somebody will be harmed by the
hazard.
Source: Health and Safety Executive.
5 steps to risk assessment.
1. Look for hazards.
2. Decide who might be harmed and
how.
3. Evaluate the risks and decide whether
existing precautions are adequate and
whether more should be done.
5 steps to risk assessment (cont).
4. Record your findings.
5. Review your assessment and revise it
if necessary.
Source: Health and Safety Executive.
Types of hazard.
•
•
•
•
Social, Cultural, Political
Environmental and Geological.
Occupational
Biological
Assessing risk.
• Risk assessment need not be
quantitative.
• Use fuzzy logic (high, medium, low).
• What is
– The risk of a hazard occurring?
– What are the consequences if the risk
occurs?
Risk assessment
Severity of consequence if event occurs
High
Medium
Low
Negligible
Severe
High
High
Medium
Effectively
zero
Medium
High
Medium
Medium/Low
Effectively
zero
Low
Medium/Low
Low
Low
Effectively
zero
Negligible
Effectively
zero
Effectively
zero
Effectively
zero
Effectively
zero
Likelihood
of hazard
occurring
Severity of consequence if event occurs (Examples of kinds of
risks).
Severe
Medium
Low
Negligible
High
Student work
placement with
military in
Baghdad
Failure to
follow local
customs
Failure to
follow local
customs
Failure to
follow local
customs
Medium
Failure to
follow local
customs
Certain
diseases
Failure to
follow local
customs
Effectively
zero
Low
Medium/Low
Low
Low
Effectively
zero
Negligible
Earthquake in
California
Effectively
zero
Effectively
zero
Being hit on
the head by an
apple falling off
a tree in
Nantes.
Likelihood
of risk
occurring
Source: adapted from University of Oxford School of
Environment
Factors affecting risk may
include:
• Gender, ethnicity, disability, sexuality.
• Activities e.g. sports and leisure.
• Town, city, village of residence within a
country.
• Language proficiency.
• Uncertainty.
Conclusions and recommendations.
• HEIs have a duty of care to their students.
• Risk assessment is useful and not
complicated.
• Clear any policy with your institution’s H&S
officer.
• Involve students in the risk assessment.