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Transport accident and incident investigation in the European Union

report
posted on 2006-06-27, 13:42 authored by S.E. Sigfridsson, C. Heijster, J. Lang, J.A. Plaza Rubio, J. Stoop, F. Taylor, P. Valkama-Joutsen, W. Walta
Most serious, public transport accidents are investigated to a greater or lesser extent but, with some conspicuous exceptions, particularly with aviation, only a few are done with the aim of improving safety. Many have been investigated with the aim of apportioning blame or liability and although safety recommendations are often made, they frequently fail to identify some of the underlying causes of whatever went wrong. An accident is rarely the result of a single event. More often, it is caused by a combination of unrelated events coming together. In many modes, the human element in this causal chain can be significant. When an accident occurs, it is normally the result of one or more shortcomings in the safety system. People rarely make mistakes deliberately, but will often do things that have serious consequences.

History

School

  • Design

Pages

92738 bytes

Citation

SIGFRIDSSON et al, 2001. Transport accident and incident investigation in the European Union. Brussels: European Transport Safety Council

Publisher

© European Transport Safety Council

Publication date

2001

Notes

This is Restricted Access. The report was prepared for the European Transport Safety Council, Brussels.

ISBN

90-76024-10-3

Language

  • en

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