Part One: Work-Related Stress, Psychosocial Hazards, and the U.S. Workplace 1.Today's World of Work: Work-related Stress and Psychosocial Hazards 2. Psychosocial Hazard Specifics 3. Why Psychosocial Environment Matters 4. Occupational Health and Safety Basics and Today’s Evolving Framework and Scope 5. U.S.: More Progress on Psychosocial Hazards Necessary Part Two- International Insights and Examples 6. Management of Psychosocial Hazards in Europe 7. Nordic Countries and Belgium: Psychosocial Hazards as an Umbrella Term 8.Work-Life Balance 9. The United Kingdom: Measures to Address Work-related Stress UK Management Standards 10. Mexico Mandates Protection from Workplace Psychosocial Risks 11. Canada: National Standard for Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace 12. Australia’s Noteworthy Steps to Address Psychological Health and Safety at Work 13. Long Working Hours and Psychosocial Stress Check Screening 14. Global Standard on Psychological Health and Safety at Work 15. Developing Countries and International Conventions Part Three: Suggested Organizational Shifts to Manage Psychosocial Hazards in the US Workplace 16. Organizational Readiness: Organizational Readiness: Policies, Planning, and Training 17. Organizational Responsibility versus Workplace Well-being 18. Managing Psychosocial Hazards as Part of an Occupational Health and Safety Management System 19. Culture and Climate: Whose Voice Gets Heard 20. Covid-19: Raising the Bar for Organizational Involvement 21. Human Sustainability and the Ethical Workplace 22. Envisioning the Modern Work Environment Recommended Resources Annex -Templates for Managing Psychosocial Hazards and Stress
Ellen Pinkos Cobb is an attorney, author, and subject matter expert on international workplace bullying and harassment laws, with many years of experience working in the international occupational health and safety and U.S. employment discrimination areas. This book is her third with Routledge; she has previously published International Sexual Harassment Laws for the Multinational Employer (2020) and Workplace Bullying and Harassment: New Developments in International Law (2017). Much of this book was written as a 2020-2021 Visiting Researcher at Bentley University's Hoffman Center for Business Ethics.
"This is a chronicle of possibilities for U.S. workers and
employers. Cobb's encyclopedic roadmap makes crystal clear what can
and should be done. There's an international research-driven
explosion of laws, codes, ordinances, and guides screaming that
attention be paid to harmful PSH - psychosocial hazards in
workplaces. Numerous Occupational Health and Safety agencies and
professionals around the world advocate for inclusion of workers'
psychological health in the list of employers' responsibilities, an
expansion of the duty of care as currently practiced in the U.S.
Rather than targeting workers for fixing, the book details that
much of the rest of the world focuses on how to identify and
mitigate work environment problems that create psychological
injuries to workers. This wonderful book throws down the gauntlet
to challenge the U.S. to follow the paths of Nordic countries,
Ireland, Spain, the UK, Canada, Australia, Mexico, Japan, and
developing countries who have implemented ILO and ISO guidelines.
The most innovative advances are attention to loneliness (UK),
making return to work safer (South Australia), death from overwork
(Japan), and a requisite disconnection from work outside work hours
as enforced in several nations. Solutions do exist to take on the
scourge of psychosocial hazards that are ignored in the U.S. Will
employers here voluntarily redesign work, in response to the
pandemic, to align themselves with their international
counterparts? This book refutes the proffered excuse that they
could not know what to do."
—Gary Namie, PhD., Co-founder & Director, Workplace Bullying
Institute"This is an incredibly rich primer for US organizations
about the nature and seriousness of psychosocial hazards as a major
occupational health and safety risk. Written in clear and
accessible language, Cobb makes the case for the elevation of
psychosocial hazards as an even more powerful driver than physical
hazards of work-related stress and the impact on employee and thus
organizational health and well-being. Grounded in an examination of
prevention and mitigation approaches of a number of countries, Cobb
identifies specific steps that US companies can and should take to
help their employees and thus, their organizations thrive."
—Loraleigh Keashly Ph.D., Professor, Communication; Associate Dean,
Curricular & Student Affairs, College of Fine, Performing and
Communication Arts; Distinguished Service Professor, Wayne State
University"Ellen Pinkos Cobb has built on her global comprehension
of employment law and policy to offer a smart analysis of
psychosocial hazards in the modern American workplace and how to
respond to them. This welcomed framing of health, mistreatment, and
stress at work ultimately prevails upon U.S. employers to embrace a
fuller duty of care for their workers. Especially when one adds
COVID to the "pre-existing conditions" confronting the world of
work, this book arrives at an opportune time."
—David C. Yamada, Professor of Law and Director, New Workplace
Institute, Suffolk University Law School, Boston, MA"A new book on
workplace psychological hazards and laws has been published. The
book is ‘Managing Psychosocial Hazards and Work-Related Stress in
Today’s Work Environment – International Insights for US
Organizations’ written by Ellen Pinkos Cobb…Many occupational
health and safety-related books written in the United States suffer
from American parochialism. Cobb’s book is written for US
organisations to show what workplace health and safety achievements
are possible. The book is a very good summary of international
changes in workplace psychosocial hazards.Part 2 of the book
contains international insights and examples. This is the research
‘meat’ of the book, showing what other countries are doing about
the hazard. Cobb is writing for the US readership, and this section
of the book could be revelatory to the open-minded US reader.Part 3
includes suggestions for the US to change…The prevention of
psychosocial harm in workplaces is a work in progress. Some nations
are more progressive than others, and Cobb’s book describes this
situation well. The biggest impediment to progress on this hazard
in Australia, as in the US, is the lack of political or
organisational will to change. Although it is published by a
largely academic publisher, the book deserves a broader US
readership as it shows how the world of work in many other
Westernised countries, some in security and trade pacts with the
US, have jumped past the US on OHS and psychosocial health."
—Kevin Jones, OHS Consultant and Freelance Writer, Editor of the
SafetyAtWorkBlog, Australia
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