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A framework for evaluating societal safety interventions

Hassel, Henrik LU and Cedergren, Alexander LU (2021) In Safety Science 142.
Abstract

Societal safety concerns maintaining critical social functions to protect the life and health of citizens as well as to meet their basic needs in times of crisis. Societal safety interventions are implemented by a range of actors in society. However, systematic evaluations of the suitability and effectiveness of proactive societal safety interventions are rather scarce – especially for complex interventions where impacts are difficult to directly observe or where there are delays between intervention and their effects. This may lead to interventions being implemented without support that they will actually improve societal safety. Some interventions may in fact be ineffective or even counter-productive. Another consequence of scarce... (More)

Societal safety concerns maintaining critical social functions to protect the life and health of citizens as well as to meet their basic needs in times of crisis. Societal safety interventions are implemented by a range of actors in society. However, systematic evaluations of the suitability and effectiveness of proactive societal safety interventions are rather scarce – especially for complex interventions where impacts are difficult to directly observe or where there are delays between intervention and their effects. This may lead to interventions being implemented without support that they will actually improve societal safety. Some interventions may in fact be ineffective or even counter-productive. Another consequence of scarce evaluations may be that efforts to improve societal safety receive undue attention in organizations and in society since decision makers often need concrete arguments for the benefits of interventions in order to implement them. The present paper addresses this by proposing a framework aiming to guide the design of evaluation of societal safety interventions. The framework is based on previous research in areas such as evaluation and intervention research as well as risk and safety science and includes four main phases: 1. Frame the evaluation, 2. Develop a program theory, 3. Plan for data collection, analysis and feedback, 4. Reflect critically and continuously. With the proposed framework, we hope to contribute to increased use of in-depth evaluation of proactive societal safety interventions, which in turn can become an argument to spend resources on effective proactive measures – potentially both increasing societal safety and cost-efficiency of interventions. Increased use of evaluation in societal safety may be beneficial not only for the organization carrying out the evaluation but could also be a learning opportunity for other organizations intending to implement similar interventions.

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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Effectiveness, Evaluation, Implementation, Interventions, Proactive, Societal safety
in
Safety Science
volume
142
article number
105393
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85109423966
ISSN
0925-7535
DOI
10.1016/j.ssci.2021.105393
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Funding Information: This research has been funded by the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB) and has been conducted within the Centre for Critical Infrastructure Protection research (CenCIP).
id
4822a92d-5e37-41a9-afa9-3e29fbb69e22
date added to LUP
2021-08-16 10:43:00
date last changed
2022-04-27 03:09:32
@article{4822a92d-5e37-41a9-afa9-3e29fbb69e22,
  abstract     = {{<p>Societal safety concerns maintaining critical social functions to protect the life and health of citizens as well as to meet their basic needs in times of crisis. Societal safety interventions are implemented by a range of actors in society. However, systematic evaluations of the suitability and effectiveness of proactive societal safety interventions are rather scarce – especially for complex interventions where impacts are difficult to directly observe or where there are delays between intervention and their effects. This may lead to interventions being implemented without support that they will actually improve societal safety. Some interventions may in fact be ineffective or even counter-productive. Another consequence of scarce evaluations may be that efforts to improve societal safety receive undue attention in organizations and in society since decision makers often need concrete arguments for the benefits of interventions in order to implement them. The present paper addresses this by proposing a framework aiming to guide the design of evaluation of societal safety interventions. The framework is based on previous research in areas such as evaluation and intervention research as well as risk and safety science and includes four main phases: 1. Frame the evaluation, 2. Develop a program theory, 3. Plan for data collection, analysis and feedback, 4. Reflect critically and continuously. With the proposed framework, we hope to contribute to increased use of in-depth evaluation of proactive societal safety interventions, which in turn can become an argument to spend resources on effective proactive measures – potentially both increasing societal safety and cost-efficiency of interventions. Increased use of evaluation in societal safety may be beneficial not only for the organization carrying out the evaluation but could also be a learning opportunity for other organizations intending to implement similar interventions.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hassel, Henrik and Cedergren, Alexander}},
  issn         = {{0925-7535}},
  keywords     = {{Effectiveness; Evaluation; Implementation; Interventions; Proactive; Societal safety}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Safety Science}},
  title        = {{A framework for evaluating societal safety interventions}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssci.2021.105393}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ssci.2021.105393}},
  volume       = {{142}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}