TITEL
Is the Machine Directive not enough?: a study of integrating work environment design in an international production development project
FöRFATTARE
Lindelöf, Peter
INSTITUTION
Arbetsvetenskap / Industriell Produktionsmiljö
SAMMANFATTNING
This thesis deals with the importance and the processes of integrating work
environment design when developing new production systems in international
collaborative projects.
During recent decades, organisations have developed systematic approaches
to deal with work environment design, often as parts of management systems.
This is commonly limited to a specific context, consistent of an
organisation with a well-developed way of working with work environment.
However, developing production systems in international collaborative
projects has become more common, implying new conditions for work
environment design.
The qualitative study of an EU-project, conducted between 2002 and 2005,
constitutes the empirical base in this thesis. This EU-project aimed to
develop new ways of manufacturing large non-rigid structures through
innovative production systems. Partners from five European countries
participated: England, France, Germany, Spain and Sweden. The partners
consisted of persons from institutes, consulting companies, universities
and manufacturing enterprises.
Within the study, semi-structured interviews were conducted together with
observations and to some extent action research. When the companies
collaborated together, the normally well-structured development procedures
to integrate work environment design became unclear. The temporary
structure of the project group did not have a specific overarching approach
to these matters and the different perspectives from different companies
both collided and reinforced each other simultaneously. The analysis, based
on a socio-technical approach, showed that the organisations participating
in the EU-project had major differences in handling work environment
design. Some of the differences, as for example how to refer to work
environment issues, are possible to derive from different discourses and
different national contexts. There were also differences depending on what
roles people had and were given in the project organisation. Participants
generally tended to have a narrow focus where, for example, most engineers
focused mainly on the technical questions and did not erect a holistic
perspective in which work environment factors were included. Further, the
experts on work environment factors, of which I was a part, focused mainly
on these questions and not on the technical innovation aspects. This
seclusion of roles and the organisation of the project is described and
analysed. The analysis showed that the organisation of the project was
divided, where the work package concerning the work environment became
detached from the rest of the project.
This thesis illuminates the problems with work environment design issues
that appeared when the different companies collaborated in the
international project. The solutions of the problems were quite obvious and
the most important task was to grasp the need of a holistic view of the
work environment and the need of a structure to handle these issues in
project organisations. In this thesis, the need of a systematic approach is
stressed and an outline of a conceptual design model is presented, whose
main points are awareness and easily measurable goals. This awareness can
include different cultures, contexts, body of knowledge, perspectives and
way of speaking about these matters. A future development of the model is
sketched to make it applicable for practitioners in future projects and not
only for scholars.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--06/71--SE / NR 2006:71
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