Using Standards in Risk Management Regulations: a Swedish Case Study
(2025)- Abstract
- Risk management in land-use planning often boils down to practical decision-making situations, such as deciding on safe distances between residential buildings and other types of developments and dangerous goods transportation
routes or hazardous industries. The practical approaches to managing risk in land-use planning vary across countries, ranging from prescriptive regulations on managing risk to non-standardized approaches requiring managing risks
without detailing how to do it in practice. The current paper aims to contribute to the discussion on which regulatory approach is preferred by applying the current knowledge base on using standards in risk management to a specific
case of recently published government... (More) - Risk management in land-use planning often boils down to practical decision-making situations, such as deciding on safe distances between residential buildings and other types of developments and dangerous goods transportation
routes or hazardous industries. The practical approaches to managing risk in land-use planning vary across countries, ranging from prescriptive regulations on managing risk to non-standardized approaches requiring managing risks
without detailing how to do it in practice. The current paper aims to contribute to the discussion on which regulatory approach is preferred by applying the current knowledge base on using standards in risk management to a specific
case of recently published government recommendations for managing risk in land-use planning in Sweden. The approach of this paper is to compare the Swedish regulator’s recent recommendations with a set of key aspects that
should be considered when assessing the use of standards in risk management regulations. It is concluded that a hard regulatory approach is primarily favorable for non-complex land-use planning decision situations where conditions are well-known. A soft approach is more beneficial for complex decision situations characterized by significant uncertainties and an unfamiliar risk canvas. Reviewing the Swedish guideline, it can be concluded that the soft,
process standard-type guideline intended for use in all land-use planning situations does not incorporate the current body of knowledge in the field. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3e1a983f-5d0d-4e56-a5a8-2b0a5aaa32b5
- author
- Ingvarson, Johan LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2025
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Proceedings of the 35th European Safety and Reliability & the 33rd Society for Risk Analysis Europe Conference
- editor
- Bjorheim Abrahamsen, Eirik ; Aven, Terje ; Bouder, Frederic ; Flage, Roger and Ylönen, Marja
- pages
- 9 pages
- publisher
- Research Publishing, Singapore
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 3e1a983f-5d0d-4e56-a5a8-2b0a5aaa32b5
- date added to LUP
- 2025-06-24 15:53:44
- date last changed
- 2025-06-26 16:24:39
@inproceedings{3e1a983f-5d0d-4e56-a5a8-2b0a5aaa32b5, abstract = {{Risk management in land-use planning often boils down to practical decision-making situations, such as deciding on safe distances between residential buildings and other types of developments and dangerous goods transportation <br/>routes or hazardous industries. The practical approaches to managing risk in land-use planning vary across countries, ranging from prescriptive regulations on managing risk to non-standardized approaches requiring managing risks <br/>without detailing how to do it in practice. The current paper aims to contribute to the discussion on which regulatory approach is preferred by applying the current knowledge base on using standards in risk management to a specific <br/>case of recently published government recommendations for managing risk in land-use planning in Sweden. The approach of this paper is to compare the Swedish regulator’s recent recommendations with a set of key aspects that <br/>should be considered when assessing the use of standards in risk management regulations. It is concluded that a hard regulatory approach is primarily favorable for non-complex land-use planning decision situations where conditions are well-known. A soft approach is more beneficial for complex decision situations characterized by significant uncertainties and an unfamiliar risk canvas. Reviewing the Swedish guideline, it can be concluded that the soft, <br/>process standard-type guideline intended for use in all land-use planning situations does not incorporate the current body of knowledge in the field.}}, author = {{Ingvarson, Johan}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 35th European Safety and Reliability & the 33rd Society for Risk Analysis Europe Conference}}, editor = {{Bjorheim Abrahamsen, Eirik and Aven, Terje and Bouder, Frederic and Flage, Roger and Ylönen, Marja}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Research Publishing, Singapore}}, title = {{Using Standards in Risk Management Regulations: a Swedish Case Study}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/222015083/ESREL-SRA-E2025-P7871.pdf}}, year = {{2025}}, }