Exploration of culture and change in the Scottish Fire Service: the effect of masculine identifications
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Authors
Allaway, Brian M.
Abstract
This study examines the organisational culture of the Scottish Fire Service, and the
political pressures for change emanating from the modernisation agenda of both the
United Kingdom and Scottish Governments. Having completed a preliminary
analysis of the Fire Service‟s culture, by examining the cultural history of the
Scottish Fire Service and the process through which individuals are socialised into
the Service, the study analyses the contemporary culture of the Service through
research in three Scottish Fire Brigades. This research concludes that there is a
clearly defined Fire Service culture, which is predicated on the operational task of
fighting fire, based on strong teams and infused with masculinity at all levels. In
these circumstances, the Service‟s cultural realities attempt to exclude women and
are derisive in their regard for other more marginalised males. Following an analysis
of Government driven imperatives for change, being applied to the Fire Service, it is
further concluded that the resistance to change, evident within the cultural realities of
the Service, can be defined as an attempt to defend one of the last bastions of male
identification in the workplace.
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