The book examines organisational communication in two Chinese chemical shipping companies with particular focus on communication between the management ashore and crew on board vessels. It further explores the role of such communication in influencing seafarers’ Occupational Health and Safety Management (OHSM). The data was mainly collected by semi-structured interviews, supplemented by field observations, informal discussions and document analyses.
By examining major areas of communication closely related to OHSM, i.e., shore to ship communication for work support, shore to ship communication for management control, ship to shore communication for safety reporting, ship to shore communication for safety suggestions, the book presents the range of purposes behind communication between the two. The result shows that communication between shore management and ship’s crew is apparently influenced by divergent interests between the two. It reveals a set of socio-economic and cultural factors that underlie their communication. As a consequence, such communication has noticeable influence on crew’s shipboard working practices as well as indirect effects on crew’s health, safety and well-being. The findings show that shore-ship communication is mainly in an asymmetrical form, and generally disengaged with the concerns of OHSM, which suggests that communication achieves limited outcomes for OHSM. The book concludes by calling policy makers as well as industrial practitioners to rethink the role of communication in effective OHSM and reshape maritime regulatory strategy in promoting OHSM in the global shipping industry.