Mining Mirror March 2018 | Page 30

In the stope Dr Sizwe Phakathi: agent of change Dr Sizwe Phakathi, head safety and sustainable development at the Chamber of Mines, tells Leon Louw more about his book and the realities of working in an underground mine. Dr Phakathi, what is the title of your book and what did you try to achieve with the research? The book is called Production, Safety and Teamwork in a Deep-Level Mining Workplace. I hope it will bring to the fore the realities of how work processes shape the actions of frontline mining teams, production supervisors, and managers. In an underground mine, the day-to-day lived experiences of workers directly shape production processes. Those experiences are of fundamental importance to a range of managerial concerns, including organisational behaviour and human resource management, organisational safety and risk management, production systems, work relations, and change management. Yet, they are too often overlooked by the executives and managers who design management strategies.  The book will help practitioners, policy-makers, and researchers to understand the factors influencing work processes, production, safety, teamwork, and work relations — not only in a mining workplace but more generally as well. The insights it provides into the importance of day-to-day lived working experiences will help them to improve organisational, employee, and team performance. When did you join the Chamber of Mines? I joined the Chamber of Mines seven years ago. I head up the safety and sustainable development department at the Chamber. [28] MINING MIRROR MARCH 2018 I consider myself a mining sociologist. My PhD (in industrial sociology) focused on workplace studies and in this case, it was mining. As part of my research, I looked at how teams of mine workers respond to productivity and safety-enhancing initiatives while going about their day-to-day work in the underground mining workplace. As I understand it, you worked underground at the rockface with the mining teams to get the data you required for your research? Yes, that is correct. I immersed myself in the everyday life of an underground mine worker and became part of a production team at a prominent gold mine on the West Rand. For six months, I was part of deep-level underground mining teams and spent time with them for the full production shift. In academic terms, the method I used is called ethnography or participant observation. So, you worked underground as a miner? Yes, but I would not become involved in activities that I was not trained for or that was unsafe. I mostly only did housekeeping. Of course, I could not do the hard-manual work like drilling, as it requires a certain level of skill, experience, and training. It is a tough environment. Part of my experience was living in the hostel, eating with the workers, waking up at four o’clock in the morning, and going down the shaft in the middle of winter — a typical day for an underground mine worker. Moreover, I mingled with them at restaurants, entertainment areas, and even played soccer with them after shifts, so I got a good idea of how it feels to be an underground mine worker in South Africa. There is no doubt that the experience enriched the quality of my research and the data that I collected, and it gave me better insight. Then I went back to Oxford to write it up as my PhD. The book is based largely on my PhD research. How will your experience enrich the current knowledge about safety and underground mining? In South Africa, there are still too many fatal injuries in the mining industry. Hopefully, this book can contribute to the mining industry’s goal of achieving zero harm. The content of my book highlights perspectives from the rock face. I believe that these perspectives, and the voice of the workers in the stopes, are missing in the boardrooms. We continue talking about health and safety and zero harm, but the voice of workers at the point of production — the frontline crews and operators — is missing. And this is the book’s contribution: it highlights the hidden world of underground deep-level workers, how they go about organising production and safety, and how they work together as a team. Furthermore, it touches on the relationships they have with supervisors. There are chapters on supervisors as well, and it shows how management ensures