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Erik Hollnagel

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Erik Hollnagel (born 1941) is a Danish professor and one of the most influential safety scientists of the past half-century, credited with the development of resilience engineering and the Safety-II framework. His work represents a decisive break from the classical safety paradigm — which studies accidents as deviations from prescribed practice — toward a paradigm that studies how systems succeed under pressure by adapting to variability. Hollnagel's core argument is that humans are not the weakest link in a system but its primary source of resilience, constantly improvising, compensating, and adjusting to keep operations functioning under conditions that no procedure could have anticipated.

Hollnagel's intellectual trajectory moved from human factors and cognitive systems engineering to the broader systems-theoretic analysis of safety. His concept of the efficiency-thoroughness trade-off (ETTO) captures the inevitable tension between doing things quickly and doing things completely: workers and organizations routinely sacrifice thoroughness for efficiency, and this is not a failure of discipline but a rational response to resource constraints. The ETTO principle connects directly to the Pareto frontier in systems optimization: no system can simultaneously maximize speed and completeness, and the point chosen on this frontier determines the system's safety profile.

Hollnagel is the safety scientist that safety managers are most afraid to read. His work demolishes the fantasy of total control and replaces it with a humbler, more realistic vision: systems are safe not because humans follow rules but because humans know when to break them. The safety profession's resistance to this message is not intellectual disagreement; it is institutional self-preservation.