A Multidimensional Conceptualization of Employee Safety Voice
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Reconcile divergent disciplinary definitions of employee voice and specify scope conditions for safety-relevant expression.
- Differentiate safety voice from safety silence, with particular attention to channels and boundary conditions in safety-critical work.
- Develop a multidimensional framework with testable propositions linking antecedents, channels, and outcomes of safety voice.
- Derive implications for research design, measurement, and organizational practice to inform both future empirical inquiry and applied safety management.
- How can safety voice be conceptualized as a multidimensional construct that meaningfully differentiates between distinct forms of safety-relevant expression?
- How do different forms of safety voice relate to safety silence, and what channels, antecedents, and boundary conditions shape their occurrence in safety-critical contexts?
2. Approach to Conceptual Development
3. Conceptual Background: Voice, Silence, and Safety-Critical Contexts
3.1. Safety Voice and Proactive Behavior
3.2. Defining the Construct
3.3. Similarities and Differences Between Employee Voice and Safety Voice
3.4. Advantages and Functions for Organizations
4. The Multidimensional Safety Voice Framework
4.1. Overarching Framework
4.2. Theoretical Background for an Extended Model
4.3. Positioning the Extended Model
4.4. Definition of Each Type of Safety Voice
4.4.1. Promotive Safety Voice
4.4.2. Preventive Safety Voice
4.4.3. Prohibitive Safety Voice
4.4.4. Hostile Safety Voice
5. Safety Silence and Safety Voices
5.1. Ineffectual Safety Silence
5.2. Diffident Safety Silence
5.3. Relational Silence
5.4. Accident Underreporting
5.5. Job-Based Safety Silence
6. Propositions for Further Empirical Testing
- Higher levels of preventive voice will predict greater near-miss reporting and faster closure of corrective actions (preventive voice → early detection).
- Prohibitive voice will be negatively associated with the persistence of hazards and the reliance on workarounds (prohibitive voice → risk reduction).
- Promotive voice will foster the adoption of safety improvements, mediated by participatory structures and resource availability (promotive voice → innovation adoption).
- The effect of a hostile voice on learning will be positive under just-culture climates but negative under punitive climates (hostile voice × climate).
- Underreporting and job-based silence will suppress preventive and prohibitive voice, while diffident and relational silence will suppress promotive and hostile voice (silence profiles → voice expression).
- Leadership, team climate, and legal protections will moderate the effects of voice forms on safety outcomes (boundary conditions).
- Team-level safety voice will predict team-level safety performance (group-level voice effects).
- Transitions from silence to voice (and vice versa) will vary by form and context, shaping both short-term safety outcomes and long-term learning (voice–silence dynamics).
7. Discussion
7.1. Practical Implications for Different Forms of Voice
7.2. Addressing Silence
7.3. Broader Organizational Recommendations
7.4. Limitations
7.5. Directions for Future Research
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Characteristics | Employee Voice | Safety Voice |
|---|---|---|
| Consequences | Less severe | Severe |
| Conceptualization | Multidimensional | Often unidimensional |
| Mechanism | Informal | Formal and informal |
| Practical relevance | Variable | High |
| Study | Conceptualization | Key Attributes | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| [19] | Initial theoretical definition as a safety citizenship behavior. Defined as a change-oriented extra-role behavior. | Altered a general employee voice scale to adapt it to safety voice. | No formal definition. |
| [31] | “Communication motivated toward changing perceived unsafe working conditions” (p. 320) “Can flow through formal and informal channels” (p. 320) “Can be directed towards numerous targets.” (p. 320) | Safety voice is conceptualized as a challenge to the current safety procedures. | Unidimensional construct. Only partially took into account that safety voice may also aim at protecting the system. |
| [18] | “Behaviors that seek to improve safety by identifying current limitations and possibilities for positive change.” (p. 105) | Safety voice is conceptualized as a multidimensional construct. Preventive focus is added to the definition. | The construct was treated as unidimensional due to multicollinearity. |
| [56] | A behavioral effort aimed at enhancing workplace safety, following mental simulation and anticipation of risk. | Safety voice as a part of a dual goal-regulation process: goal generation and goal striving | As the behavioral manifestation of goal-striving, the construct is still treated as unidimensional. |
| Dimensions | Present-Oriented | Future-Oriented |
|---|---|---|
| Challenge | Hostile Safety Voice | Promotive Safety Voice |
| Definition: Intentionally harsh or critical comments about safety practices or policies. | Definition: Sharing ideas or suggestions aimed at improving safety measures. | |
| Function: To voice dissatisfaction with current safety systems. | Function: To propose forward-looking improvements to enhance safety | |
| Implications for others: Often viewed as negative and emotionally charged. | Implications for others: Typically seen as constructive and beneficial. | |
| Intended target: Workplace, organization | Intended target: Task, team, workplace, organization | |
| Judicial status: Not protected or expected. | Judicial status: Not protected or required. | |
| Examples: Criticizing company safety protocols; making aggressive remarks about safety decisions | Examples: Recommending new safety tools; suggesting updates to safety procedures. | |
| Defense | Prohibitive Safety Voice | Preventive Safety Voice |
| Definition: Reporting deliberate violations or unsafe behaviors. | Definition: Communicating concerns about situational or unintentional risks (e.g., fatigue, equipment failure). | |
| Function: To call out human errors that threaten safety. | Function: To alert others to potential dangers and avoid future incidents. | |
| Implications for others: Intention may be positive, but it may be received as critical. | Implications for others: Generally seen as responsible and proactive. | |
| Intended target: Team | Intended target: Workplace, organization | |
| Judicial status: Protected and expected | Judicial status: Mostly protected and expected | |
| Examples: Stopping a coworker from unsafe conduct; reporting repeated breaches of rules. | Examples: Notifying supervisors of near-misses; reminding others to follow safety protocols. |
| Characteristics | Ineffectual Silence | Diffident Silence | Relational Silence | Underreporting | Job-Based Safety Silence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theoretical Foundations | Expectancy Theory [81] | Conservation of Resources Theory (Hobfoll, 1989) [82] | Perceived Organizational Support [83] | Behavioral Reasoning Theory [84] | Job Design Theories [85] |
| Empirical Investigations | [17,58,59,86] | [42,58,59] | [15,58,59] | [87,88,89] | [59] |
| Safety Voices Impacted | Promotive and Hostile safety voices | Promotive safety voice | Promotive, Preventive, Prohibitive, and Hostile safety voices | Preventive and Prohibitive Safety Voices | Promotive, Preventive, and Prohibitive Safety Voices |
| Examples | Management did not appear interested in hearing about these types of issues; The safety procedures, as they are, do not put anyone at risk. | Not feeling confident enough to speak up; Feeling unsure what to say; feeling that it could lead to a negative perception of self. | Fear of retaliation for speaking up; Speaking up would make it difficult to work with colleagues; do not want to create tension with colleagues | Not reporting an accident, near miss, risk, or otherwise safety-relevant event. | Heavy time pressure at work; heavy workload; Not in the job description |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Bazzoli, A.; Sommovigo, V.; Finstad, G.L.; Vinciarelli, V.; Curcuruto, M. A Multidimensional Conceptualization of Employee Safety Voice. Safety 2025, 11, 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety11040110
Bazzoli A, Sommovigo V, Finstad GL, Vinciarelli V, Curcuruto M. A Multidimensional Conceptualization of Employee Safety Voice. Safety. 2025; 11(4):110. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety11040110
Chicago/Turabian StyleBazzoli, Andrea, Valentina Sommovigo, Georgia Libera Finstad, Valerio Vinciarelli, and Matteo Curcuruto. 2025. "A Multidimensional Conceptualization of Employee Safety Voice" Safety 11, no. 4: 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety11040110
APA StyleBazzoli, A., Sommovigo, V., Finstad, G. L., Vinciarelli, V., & Curcuruto, M. (2025). A Multidimensional Conceptualization of Employee Safety Voice. Safety, 11(4), 110. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety11040110

