The Clapham Train Accident  
Causes, Context and the Corporate Memory Challenge
Author(s): Greg Morse
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399073035
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781399073035 Price: INR 1695.99
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Clapham was a pivotal point in British railway history. Much technology had been invented and applied to accident prevention by 1988; much more was to come. The Clapham Train Accident considers Clapham in its wider context, using official reports and expert interviews to describe both the causes and the terrible effects. It looks beyond the railway to the external factors acting not only on British Rail, but also the government of the time, and considers the safety improvements that came about as a result.

Finally, the book brings the story up to date and looks at why the lessons learned over thirty years ago still need to be retained in an industry where the baton of safety is all-too-easily dropped during re-organisation, re-branding and after the departure of those who lived through darker days to make ours shine more brightly.

The concatenation of events, the errors, the reorganisations, the financial constraints, that led to Clapham could happen to any business in any industry. On the morning of 12 December 1988, they happened to the railway.

The Clapham Train Accident will act as a cautionary tale for safety practitioners old and new, not just in rail, but also other safety critical industries. It will help readers think actions through to all consequences, helping them too to make safer decisions, particularly when changing a system, technology or method of working
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Clapham was a pivotal point in British railway history. Much technology had been invented and applied to accident prevention by 1988; much more was to come. The Clapham Train Accident considers Clapham in its wider context, using official reports and expert interviews to describe both the causes and the terrible effects. It looks beyond the railway to the external factors acting not only on British Rail, but also the government of the time, and considers the safety improvements that came about as a result.

Finally, the book brings the story up to date and looks at why the lessons learned over thirty years ago still need to be retained in an industry where the baton of safety is all-too-easily dropped during re-organisation, re-branding and after the departure of those who lived through darker days to make ours shine more brightly.

The concatenation of events, the errors, the reorganisations, the financial constraints, that led to Clapham could happen to any business in any industry. On the morning of 12 December 1988, they happened to the railway.

The Clapham Train Accident will act as a cautionary tale for safety practitioners old and new, not just in rail, but also other safety critical industries. It will help readers think actions through to all consequences, helping them too to make safer decisions, particularly when changing a system, technology or method of working
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Foreword by Dr Peter Hughes
  • Acknowledgements
  • Chapter 1 Prologue
  • Part 1: The Elements Gather
    • Chapter 2 The Journey Begins
    • Chapter 3 A Good Idea
    • Chapter 4 The Crumbling Edge?
    • Chapter 5 Sectorisation, Strikes…and Serpell
    • Chapter 6 Age of the Train?
    • Chapter 7 Forging Ahead
  • Part 2: The Elements Combine
    • Chapter 8 12 December 1988
    • Chapter 9 Down to the Wire
    • Chapter 10 Changing Tides
    • Chapter 11 Enter Hidden
    • Chapter 12 Writing the Wrongs
    • Chapter 13 Supervision and Organisation
    • Chapter 14 Claphams in the making
    • Chapter 15 A & O III
    • Chapter 16 Cap in Hand
    • Chapter 17 Best Laid Plans
    • Chapter 18 Eyes Everywhere?
    • Chapter 19 Where Responsibility Lies
  • Part 3: The Elements Defeated
    • Chapter 20 What Was Done?
    • Chapter 21 Endgame
    • Chapter 22 Brave New World?
    • Chapter 23 Nervous Breakdown
  • Part 4: The Elements Regroup?
    • Chapter 24 Corporate Memory ...
    • Chapter 25 ... And How to Keep It?
    • Chapter 26 Afterword
  • Appendices The 35 who lost their lives in the Clapham accident
  • Glossary
  • Hidden Report recommendations discussed in this book
  • Table 2 from RAIB’s report on the Waterloo incident
  • Table of Causes
  • Select Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Plates
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