We use cookies on our website to give you a better browsing experience by remembering your preferences and to analyse site traffic. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of cookies. To allow only essential cookies select "Accept essential cookies". For information on our cookie policy select "More information". Read our Privacy Notice.
Cookies policy
What are cookies?
Cookies are small text files placed on your browser by websites. They help make websites work, or work more efficiently. They also “remember” some of your preferences, so you don't have to set a preference again every time you switch to a different page on the same website.
If cookies are a concern for you, you may like to regularly clear your cookies on your browser or use a private browser mode. Check your browser settings for these options.
Essential cookies
Here is the list of essential cookies used on the Koha online catalog. Some of these depend on settings chosen by the library team; therefore, all the cookies listed may not apply to this site.
Storage
Name
Value
Expiration
Description
Cookie
CGISESSID
Session ID
Until logout or end of session
Session cookie
Cookie
KohaOpacLanguage
Language code
3 years
Stores the language the user selected, so the online catalog will appear in that same language the next time it is visited.
Cookie
form_serialized
form_serialized_limits
Search terms and limits
End of session or when the advanced search page is accessed again.
jQuery cookie. Stores search terms and limits of the last advanced search. Set when an advanced search is submitted.
Cookie
search_path_code
ads (fewer) or exs (more)
End of session or when the advanced search page is accessed again.
jQuery cookie. Related to serialized_form* cookies. Stores if the advanced search form was used with 'More options' or 'Fewer options'.
Cookie
num_paragraph
Count of search options added
End of session or when the advanced search page is accessed again.
jQuery cookie. Used to store the number of created options when user selects 'More options' in advanced search to increase search boxes.
Cookie
bib_list
List of record IDs (biblionumbers) separated by /
End of session or until the cart is emptied.
Stores cart contents in the online catalog. Set when records are added to the cart for the first time.
Non-essential cookies
The library team may create additional cookies. These are optional and will require your agreement before they are used. If any non-essential cookies are created, they will appear below.
Restorative just culture in practice :implementation and evaluation
Restorative just culture in practice : implementation and evaluation
- New York, NY ; Abingdon : Routledge, 2022
- xii, 288p
A restorative just culture has become a core aspiration for many organizations in healthcare and elsewhere. Whereas 'just culture' is the topic of some residual conceptual debate (e.g. retributive policies organized around rules, violations and consequences are 'sold' as just culture), the evidence base on, and business case for, restorative practice has been growing and is generating increasing, global interest. In the wake of an incident, restorative practices ask who are impacted, what their needs are and whose obligation it is to meet those needs. Restorative practices aim to involve participants from the entire community in the resolution and repair of harms. This book offers organization leaders and stakeholders a practical guide to the experiences of implementing and evaluating restorative practices and creating a sustainable just, restorative culture. It contains the perspectives from leaders, theoreticians regulators, employees and patient representatives. To the best of our knowledge, there is no book on the market today that can function as a guide for the implementation and evaluation of a just and learning culture and restorative practices. This book is intended to fill this gap. This book will provide, among other topics, an overview of restorative just culture principles and practices; a balanced treatment of the various implementations and evaluations of just culture and restorative processes; a guide for leaders about what to stop, start, increase and decrease in their own organizations; and an attentive to philosophical and historical traditions and assumptions that underlie just culture and restorative approaches. The interest in 'just culture', not just in healthcare but also in other fields of safety-critical practice, has been steadily growing over the past decade. It is a trending area. In this, it has become clear that 20-year-old retributive models not only hinder the acceleration of performance and organizational improvement but have also in some cases become a blunt HR instrument, an expression of power over justice and a way to stifle honesty, reporting and learning. What is new in this, then, is the restorative angle on just culture, as it has been developed over the last few years and now is practised and applied to HR, suicide prevention, healthcare improvement, regulatory innovations and other areas.
9780367754617
Organisational culture Organisation and administration