Beyond Decision Making for Outdoor Leaders: Expanding the Safety Behaviour Research Agenda

The following academic paper was published in the peer reviewed Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education and Leadership, 2016, Vol. 8, No. 2
doi:10.18666/JOREL-2016-V8-I2-7692

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Beyond Decision Making for Outdoor Leaders: Expanding the Safety Behaviour Research Agenda
Jeff Jackson, Ph.D.

ABSTRACT
The study of safety behaviour of designated outdoor leaders primarily revolves around their decision making and judgement. The last ten years, however, have seen relatively little peer-reviewed research regarding guide or instructor safety cognition and behaviour. The narrow decision making focus of modern work makes for a field of study disconnected from larger theoretical or organizational science approaches to safety – approaches from which the outdoor leadership safety behaviour research agenda may be vastly expanded. It is the intention of this paper to place outdoor leadership decision making within the greater context of work-place safety behaviour research, and identify important avenues of investigation to further our understanding of the complexity of safety behaviour.

The full text can be read here:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/308632603_Beyond_Decision_Making_for_Outdoor_Leaders_Expanding_the_Safety_Behaviour_Research_Agenda