EVALUASI PENGARUH SISTEM MANAJEMEN KESELAMATAN KERJA DAN KESEHATAN TERHADAP PT X
Keywords
Occupational Health and Safety Management Systemconstruction industry
corporate social responsibility
Production management. Operations management
TS155-194
Management. Industrial management
HD28-70
Full record
Show full item recordAbstract
Construction Industry is an industrial sector with high risk of work accident. Every year work accident at construction industry reached 32% from a whole work accident at Indonesia. Direct loss due to this accident can attain 300 billion every year. According ILO, Indonesia’s occupational safety rate in 2007 ranked at 52nd position out of 53 countries in the world that were surveyed by ILO. The objective of this research is to examine influence of Occupational Health and Safety Management System toward PT X performance’s as one of Contractor Company at Indonesia. Company’s performance that is examined is safety & health performance and competitiveness performance. Data in this research obtained from interview and questionnaire. These data then processed by using statistic descriptive method and Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) . The result then evaluated to observe Goodness of Fit (GOF) between model and data. The results from research shows that Occupational Health and Safety Management System influence safety & health performance and competitiveness performance significantly as indicated by result of the research that fulfill criteria of Goodness of Fit.Date
2011-09-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:145f4557dc1046b7b0947aa32192c3492301-8313
https://doaj.org/article/145f4557dc1046b7b0947aa32192c349
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Grow in Concert with Nature : Sustaining East Asia's Water Resources through Green Water DefenseTurner, Graeme; Li, Xiaokai; Jiang, Liping (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2012-07-02)As countries develop, the demand for water increases while water supply becomes less certain and is often not enough to meet demand. In general, pressures from both environment and human activities can increase the likelihood of water scarcity. Such pressures include increased socio-economic development and population growth, change in people's diets, competition for available water among different user sectors and growing climate variability. Climate change is likely to exacerbate the existing demand and supply stresses, particularly when more frequent and extreme droughts and floods, as well as rising sea level are becoming more evident. In temperate, sub-temperate regions, less rainfall and longer dry seasons are expected. In tropical areas, rainfall is predicted to be similar or greater in terms of annual average volumes, more intense and severe storms and seasonal droughts (IPCC, 2007). These pressures will test the effectiveness of water resource management systems in providing a consistent and secure water supply for all users, with minimum externalities. This study will assess advances in management practices, institutional and technological innovations for managing water scarcity sustainably under a changing climate. This study of 'sustaining East Asia's water resources through Green Water Defense (GWD) is a sub-study of the 'towards GWD in East Asia' study and is complemented by another sub-study 'green water defense for flood risk management in East Asia' that focuses on flood management in delta regions.
-
VIDEO: Session 4: Modern Challenges and Modern Solutions, and Session 5: The Future of our Public LandsTheobald, Dave; Culver, Nada; Birdsong, Brett; Leshy, John D.; Lance, Linda; Dombeck, Mike (Colorado Law Scholarly Commons, 2016-10-21)VIDEO: 2:50 p.m. - 4:10 p.m. SESSION 4: Modern Challenges and Modern Solutions Moderator and Commentator: Mark Squillace, University of Colorado School of Law Panelists: Dave Theobald, Conservation Science Partners Nada Culver, The Wilderness Society Bret Birdsong, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, School of Law 4:10 p.m. - 5:10 p.m. SESSION 5: The Future of our Public Lands Panelists: John D. Leshy, University of California, Hastings College of the Law Linda Lance, Bureau of Land Management (Invited) Mike Dombeck, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
-
Managing Public Debt : From Diagnostics to Reform ImplementationWorld Bank (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2012-05-30)Managing Public Debt will serve
 government officials contemplating or in the process of
 reforming their practices, providers of technical
 assistance, and practitioners working on building capacity
 in public debt management. Because effective implementation
 of debt management strategies also requires a developed
 domestic government debt market, readers will also be
 interested in the companion volume, Developing the Domestic
 Government Debt Market, published by The World Bank in
 February 2007, based on the same joint pilot program.