Mandatory collision avoidance systems: lived experiences of South African mineworkers
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Pretoria
Abstract
The study explored the intersection between regulatory enforcement, technology
acceptance, and safety behaviour in the South African mining industry, following the
mandatory adoption of Collision Avoidance Systems (CAS) on Trackless Mobile
Machinery (TMM). Although these regulations aim to prevent collisions, persistent
incidents raised questions about whether mineworkers genuinely accept CAS or merely
comply with it.
Mineworkers’ experiences were explored in terms of how they perceive, trust, and respond
to CAS under mandatory conditions, and how these experiences affect their effective use
and compliance behaviours. A qualitative approach was employed, conducting semistructured
interviews with twelve participants from various mining operations, including
operators, artisans, and a safety officer. The data was analysed thematically to identify
emergent themes of perceptions, trust, and behavioural responses.
The findings revealed that mineworkers recognised CAS as beneficial to their safety.
However, acceptance of the system was broadly symbolic and driven by compliance
pressure and operational demands. Technical limitations, CAS performance and
inconsistent enforcement were found to foster conditional trust and workarounds. The
study concludes that mandatory enforcement achieves compliance but not genuine
acceptance. Legitimacy, trust, and user perception are all critical for effective technology
adoption modelling of safety systems in high-risk, regulated environments.
Description
Mini Dissertation (MBA)--University of Pretoria, 2025.
Keywords
UCTD, Mandatory adoption, Technology acceptance, Symbolic compliance, CAS
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-09: Industry, innovation and infrastructure
Citation
*
