Safety citizenship behavior (SCB) in the workplace: A stable construct? Analysis of psychometric invariance across four European countries

Accid Anal Prev. 2019 Aug:129:190-201. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2019.05.023. Epub 2019 Jun 1.

Abstract

Safety citizenship behaviors (SCBs) are important participative organizational behaviors that emerge in work-groups. SCBs create a work environment that supports individual and team safety, encourages a proactive management of workplace safety, and ultimately, prevents accidents. In spite of the importance of SCBs, little consensus exists on research issues like the dimensionality of safety citizenship, and if any superordinate factor level of safety citizenship should be conceptualized, and thus measured. The present study addressed this issue by examining the dimensionality of SCBs, as they relate to behaviors of helping, stewardship, civic virtue, whistleblowing, voice, and initiating change in current practices. Data on SCBs were collected from four industrial plants (N = 1065) in four European countries (Italy, Russia, Switzerland, United Kingdom). The results show that SCBs structure around two superordinate second-order factors that reflect affiliation and challenge. Multi-group analyses supported the structure and metric invariance of the two-factor model across the four national subsamples.

Keywords: Affiliative behavior; Change oriented behavior; Cross-National research; Factor structure; Multi-Group analysis; Safety citizenship.

MeSH terms

  • Accidents, Occupational / prevention & control*
  • Europe
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Italy
  • Organizational Culture*
  • Psychometrics
  • Russia
  • Social Behavior*
  • Switzerland
  • United Kingdom