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E-raamat: Physical Safety: A Matter of Balancing Responsibilities

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: WRR Publications
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040789438
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: WRR Publications
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040789438

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Physical safety is a core task of government. It is neither surprising nor unreasonable for government to be held accountable for hazardous substances, for food safety, for flood protection, for the spread of infectious diseases, or for the risks involved in new technologies.

In 2011 the Dutch Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations asked the Scientific Council for Government Policy (wrr) to investigate the scope for the development of a generic risk policy in relation to physical safety. Do citizens and businesses take sufficient responsibility for physical safety? Could the government assume a smaller role, and what part could the business community play in this?

In this report the WRR argues that in order to answer these questions a distinction needs to be made between incidents, damage, risk and uncertainty. In addition, the wrr recommends that the thinking about responsibility for safety should not be placed in the perspective of a failing government, but that the central focus should be on the ambition of good governance. Finally, the wrr suggests that thinking about safety from the perspective of damage offers a useful framework for thinking through and reassessing the distribution of responsibilities. Responsibility for preventing, limiting and dealing with damage can only be assigned in advance, not retrospectively.
Foreword 7(2)
1 Introduction
9(10)
1.1 Responsibility for physical safety
9(1)
1.2 Request for reflection
9(2)
1.3 Key concepts: incidents, damage, risks and uncertainty
11(3)
1.4 Interactions
14(1)
1.5 Guide to this publication
15(4)
2 Dealing with incidents
19(10)
2.1 Risk-regulation reflex?
19(1)
2.2 Perceived reality
20(1)
2.3 Lack of evidence
21(2)
2.4 Tilting the perspective towards good governance
23(2)
2.5 Conclusion
25(4)
3 Risks and uncertainty
29(22)
3.1 Fundamental political appraisal
29(1)
3.2 Intertwine opportunities and threats
30(1)
3.3 Make allowance fbr the social and psychological properties of danger
31(1)
3.4 Utilise risk comparisons
32(1)
3.5 Accept uncertainty-and the responsibility for uncertainty
33(2)
3.6 Organise the way uncertainty is dealt with
35(3)
3.7 Incorporation into policy
38(8)
3.7.1 The National Risk Assessment
39(2)
3.7.2 Amending environment and planning law: the Simply Better operation
41(5)
3.8 Conclusion
46(5)
4 Damage arrangements: a different perspective
51(26)
4.1 Damage as the focal point
51(1)
4.2 Current practices
51(5)
4.3 Reasons for uncompensated damage
56(5)
4.4 Damage arrangements as a basis for a balanced allocation of responsibility
61(8)
4.4.1 Businesses taking responsibility for themselves and society
62(3)
4.4.2 The role of the citizen
65(1)
4.4.3 The role of government
66(3)
4.5 Conclusion
69(8)
5 Conclusions
77(8)
5.1 Difficult questions
77(1)
5.2 Key concepts: incidents, damage, risks and uncertainty
77(1)
5.3 Beyond reflexes
77(2)
5.4 Is a general policy possible?
79(3)
5.4.1 Reference points for dealing with risks and uncertainty -
79(1)
5.4.2 Damage arrangements: a different perspective on the allocation ofresponsibility
80(2)
5.5 Top three on the list of priority studies
82(1)
5.6 Final remarks
83(2)
Bibliography 85
Marjolein B.A. van Asselt, Peter de Goede, V.C. Karin Ammerlaan and Jelle van Aanholt, The Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR).