Understanding Safety Noncompliance in Saudi Work Organizations: Why Workers Ignore Regulations and What Management Can Do?
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Date
2025
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
This study investigates the cultural, organizational, and regulatory reasons for safety
noncompliance in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia workplaces. Adopting a mixed-methods
quantitative design, the study combines Hofstede’s Values Survey Module 2013 (VSM13) and
the Nordic Occupational Safety Climate Questionnaire (NOSACQ-50) to evaluate national
cultural dimensions and safety climate perceptions among 171 participants from diverse
sectors and demographic categories. An international comparison gap analysis between Saudi
occupational safety and health (OSH) and labor law and global ISO 45001 standards also
underpins the study’s regulatory findings.
VSM13 outcomes manifest culturally ingrained characteristics—i.e., high Power Distance
(PDI), moderately high Uncertainty Avoidance (UAI), and low Indulgence (IVR)—that inhibit
worker voice, support obedience to authority, and deter active safety intervention (Hofstede et
al., 2013; Almutairi, Heller, & Yen, 2020). Subgroup analysis indicates that females, less
educated, and unskilled participants significantly increased in PDI and UAI, which
distinguishes them as potential passive noncompliance risk groups. By contrast, young, highly
educated participants exhibited increased individualism and proactive safety orientations,
which supports regional modernization effects documented in the literature (Almutairi, 2019;
Ahsan, Rana, & Fatima, 2023).
NOSACQ-50 results suggest that while employees demonstrate high peer commitment and
trust in safety systems, perceptions of managerial justice and empowerment remain low—key
dimensions for effective participatory safety leadership (Kines et al., 2011; Tear & Reader,
2023). Regulatory analysis highlights that while Saudi labor law emphasizes employer duty, it
lacks enforceable mechanisms for participative safety governance, such as anonymous
reporting, climate diagnostics, or worker consultation—mechanisms required under ISO
45001 (ISO, 2018; Choudhry, 2023).
It advances safety culture research by describing how national culture, safety climate, and
legal infrastructure function in tandem in influencing safety behavior in a non-Western
country. It has practical applications in the need for culturally specific communication
policies, empowerment of the supervisor, and institutional reforms in filling regulatory holes.
These recommendations facilitate sustainable safety governance compatible with Vision 2030
goals of Saudi Arabia (Alqahtani et al., 2024; GOSI, 2023).
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Keywords
Safety, Saudi, Industrial, Management
