Setting Safety Standards: Regulation in the Public and Private Sectors

by Ross E. Cheit

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In this highly original and meticulously researched comparison of public and private standards-setting, Ross Cheit questions the old maxim that government-set safety standards are too severe while those set by the private sector are too lenient. Identifying the comparative institutional advantages of each arrangement through four paired case studies of grain elevators, woodstoves, aviation fire safety, and gas space heaters, he finds instead that some private standards are surprisingly strict, while government is better positioned to survey real-world experience and sponsor research likely to improve standards-setting.

Setting Safety Standards challenges those political scientists who argue that only public institutions can advance the public interest in the controversial field of health and safety. Cheit draws attention to such little-known organizations as Underwriters Laboratories and the National Fire Protection Association, private-sector alternatives to the government regulation so frequently criticized as time-consuming, inflexible, and unreasonable. These organizations, he shows, play a far more significant role in regulation than most federal agencies, even though the standards they develop are widely—and often mistakenly—assumed to be less concerned with due process than government standards and often unduly lax.

This study should be widely read by public policy and regulation experts in both the public and the private sectors as well as by academics in the field.
  • ISBN10 0520067339
  • ISBN13 9780520067332
  • Publish Date 5 November 1990
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 15 November 2006
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University of California Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 320
  • Language English