8 research outputs found

    Turning Themselves In: Why Companies Disclose Regulatory Violations

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    As part of a recent trend toward more cooperative relations between regulators and industry, novel government programs are encouraging firms to monitor their own regulatory compliance and voluntarily report their own violations. In this study, we examine how enforcement activities, statutory protections, community pressure, and organizational characteristics influence organizations ā€™ decisions to self-police. We created a comprehensive dataset for the ā€œAudit Policyā€, a United States Environmental Protection Agency program that encourages companies to self-disclose violations of environmental laws and regulations in exchange for reduced sanctions. We find that facilities were more likely to self-disclose if they were recently inspected or subjected to an enforcement action, were narrowly targeted for heightened scrutiny by a US EPA initiative, and were larger and thus more prominent in their environment. While we find some evidence that state-level statutory immunity facilitates self-disclosure, we find no evidence that statutory audit privilege does so. The pitched political battles over regulation in the 1970s and 1980s, from deregulation to Reaganā€™s vow to get government ā€œoff the backs ā€ of industry, have given way in recent years to a ne

    Rationale and Design for a GRADE Substudy of Continuous Glucose Monitoring

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    Annual Selected Bibliography

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