Leveraging Strategic Foresight to Advance Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. A Brief Overview of Strategic Foresight
1.2. Approaches to Strategic Foresight
1.2.1. Time Horizons
1.2.2. Scenarios
1.3. Uses of Scenario-Based Strategic Foresight
2. Developing Plausible Future Scenarios for Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being
2.1. The Matrix Method of Constructing Future Scenarios
2.2. Applying the Matrix Method to Develop Alternative Work Scenarios
2.3. The Archetypes Method of Constructing Future Scenarios
- Continuation (or Continued Growth): A future where the trends of the present accelerate without any major changes or disruptions.
- Collapse: A future where the current system fails due to some negative force(s) or dysfunction.
- New Equilibrium (or Constraint): A future where the current system is challenged in some way and must respond with some type of change to achieve a new sense of balance and stability.
- Transformation: A future where there is a fundamental change and the current system is discarded for an entirely new one.
2.4. Applying the Archetypes Method to Develop Future Work Scenarios
3. Using Scenarios to Protect and Promote Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being
4. Foresight Framework for Occupational Safety and Health (OSH)
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Approach | Originating Organization | Overview of Steps (with Step Name Included, Where Applicable) |
---|---|---|
Assumption-based planning [36,37] | The RAND Corporation | • Identify assumptions underlying current operations or plans • Identify assumptions that may be vulnerable to or violated by future changes • Define signposts, or events that would indicate an assumption is becoming more or less vulnerable over time • Define shaping actions that will either cause or prevent the failure of a vulnerable assumption • Define hedging actions that can help better prepare for a potential assumption failure in the future |
FORLEAN [38] | European Commission | • Diagnosis: Reflect on the current system • Exploration: Build scenarios of possible evolutions of the system • Strategic Orientation: Discuss possible strategies • Making Choices: Encourage open debate to reach consensus • Implementation and Coordination: Translate findings into action |
Framework Foresight [28,39] | University of Houston | • Framing: Identify the domain, or boundaries and key categories of what will be explored • Scanning: Scan the internal and external environments for information and trends related to the domain • Forecasting: Identify drivers and uncertainties, then create alternative futures • Visioning: Identify implications, challenge assumptions, and develop a strategic vision • Planning: Develop strategic options • Acting: Communicate results, create an action plan, and institutionalize strategic thinking |
Generic Foresight Process [40] | Swinburne University of Technology | • Inputs: Scan the external environment to identify changes that are shaping the future • Analysis: Analyze the scanning results to explore potential shifts needed to identify strategic implications • Interpretation: Identify assumptions and worldviews affecting how the future is interpreted • Prospection: Develop alternative images, or scenarios, for plausible and preferred futures • Outputs: Identify strategic options • Strategy: Agree on action to take today |
Manoa Futures Visioning Process [41] | University of Hawaii | • Appreciate the Past: Explore the history of the community or group involved • Understand the Present: Discuss the problems and possibilities of the present • Forecast Aspects of the Future: Discuss possible challenges and opportunities from the futures • Experience Alternative Futures: Craft alternative futures trends, emerging issues, challenges, and opportunities from the future • Envision the Futures: Envision a preferred future • Create the Futures: Decide the sequence of what to do now to move toward the preferred future • Institutionalize Futures Research: Set up an ongoing ‘futures’ unit to keep the process going |
Oxford Scenario Planning Approach [31] | University of Oxford | • Develop an understanding of the problematic situation • Define, develop, verify, and refine a set of strategic frames—the underlying structures of belief, perception, and appreciation used to make sense of the world • Generate alternative scenarios • Engage in iterative learning cycles comprised of: • Reframing: Contrasting alternative scenarios of the future to reveal, test, and redefine the official future, generate alternatives, and generate new knowledge and insights • Reperception: Defining a new course of action |
Exploring the Future [42] | Royal Dutch Shell | • Preparation: Assembling a clear description of the project, goals, and resources • Pioneering: Challenging assumptions and identifying themes • Map-making: Building and vetting the scenarios • Navigation: Presenting the scenarios to inform plans and actions of key stakeholders, and refining the scenarios based on feedback • Reconnaissance: Examining implications, interpreting signals of change, and further disseminating the scenarios • Preparation: Beginning the process anew to develop fresh scenarios in response to change over time |
Product Type * | Definition |
---|---|
Artifact | Linguistic, conceptual, cultural, and material objects and articles, including physical tools, technical processes or procedures, or symbols and logos [52] |
Headline or News Story | Brief captions or stories describing events that may happen in the future [53] |
Narrative | Stories of organizations and the people in them that rethink the past, reconsider present conditions, and reimagine the future [54] |
Persona | Characters who live in one plausible future and fully embody the human representation in that future [55] |
Headquarters Location | Organization Name | Organization Type * |
---|---|---|
Australia | Institute for Safety, Compensation, and Recovery Research | Research |
Belgium | European Parliamentary Research Service | Government |
Canada | Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship | Research |
Centre for International Governance Innovation | Think Tank | |
Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique (INRS) | Academic | |
Policy Horizons Canada | Government | |
Finland | Demos Helsinki | Think Tank |
France | Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development | IGO |
Germany | Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs | Government |
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft | Research | |
Ireland | European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions (Eurofound) | IGO |
Netherlands | Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) | Research |
Scotland | Scotland’s Futures Forum | Think Tank |
Spain | European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA) | IGO |
Switzerland | International Labour Organisation (ILO) | IGO |
World Economic Forum (WEF) | NGO | |
United Kingdom | Deloitte | Consulting |
Health and Safety Executive | Government | |
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) | Consulting | |
Rethinkery Foresight | Consulting | |
The Royal Society for Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA) | Research | |
Schumacher Institute | Think Tank | |
University of Oxford, Saïd Business School | Academic | |
United States | Cognizant | Consulting |
Data & Society Research Institute | Research | |
Future-IQ | Consulting | |
The Institute for the Future | Think Tank | |
International Association of Outsourcing Professionals | Consulting | |
McKinsey Global Institute | Consulting | |
Millennium Project | Think Tank | |
RAND Corporation | Research | |
Toffler Associates | Consulting |
Low economic growth and technology application | High economic growth and technology application | |
Supportive governance and public attitude | Evolution Technology significantly changes half of all jobs. There is continued investment in OSH to address dangerous and unhealthy work. | Transformation Technology significantly impacts most jobs. At the same time, work safety and quality remain a high priority. |
Resistive governance and public attitude | Fragmentation Technology has had a low impact on jobs overall, though many low-skill repetitive jobs have been fully automated. | Exploitation Technology use varies by industry. Routine, repetitive jobs have been fully automated to save costs. Job competition is high. |
Individualism | Collectivism | |
Corporate Integration | Blue World Capitalism rules, widening the wage gap. Performance-enhancing augmentation technologies, medications, and implants are normalized. Privacy is lost to continuous employer surveillance inside and outside the workplace. | Green World Corporate social responsibility rules. Employers offer fair pay, family-friendly policies, and skills development. The increased use of technology for ethical and environmental reasons reduces the number of available jobs. |
Business Fragmentation | Red World Innovation rules. High rates of technology use decrease job opportunities, inflate market pressures, and increase work pace. Skills, not workers, are valued. | Yellow World Business ethics rules. A collective desire for the fair distribution of wealth and resources drives policy. Autonomous and flexible work provides purpose and fulfillment. |
Steady Technological Change | Accelerated Technological Change | |||
Low Talent Mobility | High Talent Mobility | Low Talent Mobility | High Talent Mobility | |
Slow Learning Evolution | Workforce Autarkies A large number of displaced workers compete for few jobs. Governmental policies restrict international labor mobility. | Mass Movement Worker mobility has resulted in steady incomes, lower living costs, and high levels of competition between workers at all skill levels. | Robot Replacement Widening skills gaps have increased inequalities and polarized views. Borders are tightly controlled in an effort to keep talent local. | Polarized World Due to fast-paced tech and low-paced learning, large portions of the workforce are unemployable. ‘Super economies’ of high-skilled people trade only with one another. |
Fast Learning Evolution | Empowered Entrepreneurs Lifelong learning is embraced. Workers are able to create their own opportunities in dynamic markets, but migration is restricted in an attempt to retain talent. | Skilled Flows A fast-paced skills evolution enhances creativity and productivity. Abundant opportunities normalize labor mobility. Inequality at the country level increases based on access to tech resources. | Productive Locals There is high demand for workers to complement machines. Borders are tightly controlled in an effort to keep talent local. | Agile Adapters The global workforce is mobile and agile. There is worldwide harmony of social and workforce policies, standards, and credentials. Rapid tech changes, however, have created instability for the economy and society. |
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Streit, J.M.K.; Felknor, S.A.; Edwards, N.T.; Howard, J. Leveraging Strategic Foresight to Advance Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 8477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168477
Streit JMK, Felknor SA, Edwards NT, Howard J. Leveraging Strategic Foresight to Advance Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(16):8477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168477
Chicago/Turabian StyleStreit, Jessica M. K., Sarah A. Felknor, Nicole T. Edwards, and John Howard. 2021. "Leveraging Strategic Foresight to Advance Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 16: 8477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168477
APA StyleStreit, J. M. K., Felknor, S. A., Edwards, N. T., & Howard, J. (2021). Leveraging Strategic Foresight to Advance Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(16), 8477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168477