What if the systems designed to keep people safe are quietly making operations more dangerous?
In Current Safety Systems and Why They Are Dangerous, Jeff Hicks exposes a critical flaw in modern safety oversight: organizations have become highly skilled at proving they look safe while losing the ability to measure whether they actually are.
Across aviation, healthcare, construction, energy, and other high-consequence industries, safety systems increasingly reward documentation, credentials, and audit performance rather than the real-world defenses that prevent failure. The result is what Hicks calls Safety Theater - activity that creates the appearance of control without reliably improving protection.
Drawing on decades of frontline operational experience and global safety evaluation work, Hicks introduces a new model for measuring safety capability instead of compliance alone.
At the center of this approach is SEBA (Scalable Expert Barrier Assurance) - a framework designed to evaluate whether safety barriers truly hold under real-world conditions.
This book reveals:
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Why passing inspections does not guarantee safety
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How audits can select the wrong operators and hide real risk
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The "Credential Paradox" - when higher qualifications reduce capability
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How safety programs drift toward appearance over performance
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Why operational expertise must be central to oversight
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How organizations can design truth-capable evaluation systems
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A practical model for measuring whether safeguards actually work
Rather than attacking standards or regulations, this book shows how oversight can evolve to remain defensible, scalable, and aligned with operational reality.
This book is for:
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Leaders responsible for risk and safety decisions
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Regulators and oversight professionals
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Safety practitioners and auditors
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High-risk industry operators
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Anyone responsible for protecting people in complex environments
Current Safety Systems and Why They Are Dangerous challenges conventional thinking about safety and offers a path toward oversight systems that measure what actually prevents failure, not just what is easy to audit.
Because in high-risk environments, compliance is baseline.
Capability is survival.