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The most recent updated version of this chapter is available at: https://opentext.ku.edu/teams/chapter/intercultural-and-plane-crashes/

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Culture can affect aviation safety through its effect on how the flight crew deals with difficult situations; cultures with lower power distances and higher levels of individuality can result in better aviation safety outcomes. In higher power cultures subordinates are less likely to question their superiors. The crash of Korean Air Flight 801 in 1997 was attributed to the pilot’s decision to land despite the junior officer’s disagreement, while the crash of Avianca Flight 52 was caused by the failure to communicate critical low-fuel data between pilots and controllers, and by the failure of the controllers to ask the pilots if they were declaring an emergency and assist the pilots in landing the aircraft. The crashes have been blamed on aspects of the national cultures of the crews.[citation needed]

Cultural differences in aviation

Geert Hofstede classified national cultures into four dimensions, two of which can be applied to the flight deck: power distance, which defines the “nature of relations between subordinates and superiors”, or “how often subordinates are afraid to express disagreement”;[1]and whether the culture is collectivist or individualist in nature. Western cultures are individualistic and have a low power distance, whereas most Asian and Latin cultures are on the other side of the spectrum.[2]

Past incidents

Tenerife Disaster

Wreckage of Tenerife airport disaster
Wreckage of Tenerife airport disaster

On March 27, 1977, two Boeing 747 passenger jets, KLM Flight 4805 and Pan Am Flight 1736, collided on the foggy runway at Los Rodeos Airport (now Tenerife North Airport), on the Spanish island of TenerifeCanary Islands, killing 583 people, making it the deadliest accident in aviation history. Before takeoff, the KLM flight engineer expressed his concern about the Pan Am not being clear of the runway by asking the pilots in his own cockpit, “Is he not clear, that Pan American?” The KLM captain emphatically replied “Oh, yes” and continued with the takeoff, snubbing the junior officer’s concern. This event led to widespread establishment of crew resource management as a fundamental part of airline pilots’ training.[6]

Korean Air Flight 801

Animation of Korean 801 on approach
Animation of Korean 801 on approach

On approach to Guam in 1997, Korean 801 crashed, mainly due to pilot fatigue and poor communication between the flight crew. The captain made the decision to land despite the junior officer’s disagreements, eventually bringing the plane down short of the runway, highlighting how a pilot can contribute to a disaster.[7] In high power distance cultures, it is uncommon for subordinates to question their superiors. “Leaders may be autocratic”.[8][importance?] High power distance can be seen as the willingness to be in an unequal position, making it a challenge for an officer lower in the hierarchy to question the decisions of the one in power. At the same time, even in a high uncertainty avoidance culture, with the crew more likely to follow standard operating procedures (SOPs), the crew might react less efficiently to a novel situation.[9]

Avianca Flight 52

Similar model of Avianca 52. Main article: Avianca Flight 52
Similar model of Avianca 52. 

Avianca 52 from Bogota to New York crashed after running out of fuel, a problem caused by language and cultural barriers. Both crew spoke Spanish as their primary language, but the first officer had better proficiency in English. “Colombia is a highly masculine, high power distance, and collectivist country”, which might have led to the crew’s reluctance to ask for help from the New York controllers when they knew they were in trouble.[10] In 1977, a cargo aircraft crashed shortly after takeoff from Anchorage en route to Tokyo, killing all 3 crew. The captain was a US national, with the other two being Japanese. Neither Japanese pilot mentioned the captain’s intoxication or stopped him from flying the plane. They were reluctant to do so, and given Japan’s moderately high power-distance index, their deference to authority could have been a major contributing factor. Had they done so, it would have humiliated the captain, who was clearly their superior, and from there on, it was impossible “to prevent the captain from taking control of the aircraft, even at the cost of an accident.”[11]

Other impacts of culture in airline safety

Although crew resource management (CRM) can improve safety in the aviation industry, it is not widely accepted across all cultures. This is likely due to differences in uncertainty avoidance, or “the need for rule-governed behavior and clearly defined procedures”. Standard operating procedures are more easily accepted in high uncertainty avoidance cultures, such as Greece, Korea, and some Latin cultures. In the United States, however, where flexibility is emphasized, pilots may not be as accepting of CRM culture.[12]

Improvements can be made to CRM by drawing on the strengths of both individualistic and collectivisic cultures. Western assertiveness can be helpful in developing a low power-distance cockpit, while the Eastern interdependence brings cooperation, interdependence, and communication to create a safer flying environment.[13]

Ideally, “CRM represents low power distance (free exchange of information among the crew) and collectivism (recognition and acceptance of crew interdependence), a rare cultural combination.” [14]

References

  1. ^ Merritt, Ashleigh (May 2000). “Culture in the Cockpit Do Hofstede’s Dimensions Replicate?”. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology31 (3): 283–301. doi:10.1177/0022022100031003001.
  2. ^ Hayward, Brent (1997). “Culture, CRM and aviation safety”. The Australian Aviation Psychology Association.
  3. ^ Engle, Michael (2000). “Culture in the cockpit—CRM in a multicultural world”. Journal of Air Transportation World Wide5(1).
  4. ^ Li, Wen-Chin; Harris, Don; Chen, Aurora (April 2007). “Eastern Minds in Western Cockpits: Meta-Analysis of Human Factors in Mishaps from Three Nations”. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine78 (4): 424.
  5. ^ Harris, Don; Li, Wen-Chin (May 2008). “Cockpit Design and Cross-Cultural Issues Underlying Failures in Crew Resource Management”. Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine79(5): 537–538. doi:10.3357/asem.2271.2008.
  6. ^ Baron, Robert. “The Cockpit, the Cabin, and Social Psychology”. Global Operators Flight Information Resource. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
  7. ^ “AIRCRAFT ACCIDENT REPORT- KOREAN AIR FLIGHT 801” (PDF). NTSB. Jan 13, 2000. Retrieved Nov 1, 2015.
  8. ^ Helmreich, Robert (June 2004). “Culture, threat, and error: lessons from aviation”. Canadian Journal of Anesthesia51 (1): R1–R4. doi:10.1007/bf03018331.
  9. ^ Helreich, Robert (1999). “Building Safety on the Three Cultures of Aviation”. Proceedings of the IATA Human Factors Seminar: 39–43.
  10. ^ Rosekind, Mark (February 1996). “Cross-Cultural Barriers to Effective Communication in Aviation”. NTRS.
  11. ^ Strauch, Barry (Apr 2010). “Can Cultural Differences Lead to Accidents? Team Cultural Differences and Sociotechnical System Operations”. Human Factors52 (2): 246–263. doi:10.1177/0018720810362238.
  12. ^ Helmreich, Robert; Merritt, Ashleigh; Wilhelm, John (November 13, 2009). “The Evolution of Crew Resource Management Training in Commercial Aviation”. The International Journal of Aviation Psychology9 (19–32).
  13. ^ Merriti, Ashleigh (Jan 1996). “Human Factors on the Flight Deck The Influence of National Culture”. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology27 (1): 5–24. doi:10.1177/0022022196271001.
  14. ^ Hofstede, Geert (1991). Cultures and organizations: Software of the mind. Maidenhead, UK: McGraw-Hill.

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