15 research outputs found
Double Dippers or Bureaucracy Busters? False Claims Act Suits by Government Employees
This Article begins with a brief description of the False Claims Act and its 1986 amendments. The Article then describes the Act\u27s jurisdictional provisions, which classify potential plaintiffs. Next, the Article discusses judicial and congressional responses to the 1986 amendments and how they relate to FCA suits filed by government employees. Finally, the Article evaluates the benefits and drawbacks of permitting government workers to file FCA suits and proposes a framework for permitting such actions in certain circumstances
Workplace Violence and Security: Are there Lessons for Peacemaking?
Workplace violence has captured the attention of commentators, employers, and the public at large. Although statistically the incidents of workplace homicide and assault are decreasing, public awareness of the problem has heightened, largely through media reports of violent incidents. Employers are exhorted to address the problem of workplace violence and are offered a variety of programs and processes to prevent its occurrence. Many techniques, however, conflict with values that are critical to achieving sustainable peace. We focus on types of workplace violence that are triggered by organizational factors. From among the plethora of recommendations, we identify those responses that are most and least consistent with positive peace. We find that processes that promote privacy, transparency, and employee rights hold the most promise for peacemaking. We submit that such structures and processes can be transportable beyond the workplace to promote peace locally, nationally, and globally.workplace violence, employee rights, sustainable peace, and corporate governance
Workplace Violence and Security: Are there Lessons for Peacemaking?
Workplace violence has captured the attention of commentators, employers, and the public at large. Although statistically the incidents of workplace homicide and assault are decreasing, public awareness of the problem has heightened, largely through media reports of violent incidents. Employers are exhorted to address the problem of workplace violence and are offered a variety of programs and processes to prevent its occurrence. Many techniques, however, conflict with values that are critical to achieving sustainable peace. We focus on types of workplace violence that are triggered by organizational factors. From among the plethora of recommendations, we identify those responses that are most and least consistent with positive peace. We find that processes that promote privacy, transparency, and employee rights hold the most promise for peacemaking. We submit that such structures and processes can be transportable beyond the workplace to promote peace locally, nationally, and globally.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/39920/3/wp535.pd
Laboratory test procedures to predict the thermal behaviour of concrete.
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Engineering, University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of PhilosophyThe cracking of mass and structural concrete due to thermal stress is a major problem
in the concrete construction industry. Concrete will crack when the thermal
stress exceeds tbe tensile strength of the concrete, Decisions on the type of concrete
mix, cooling facilities and construction techniques to be used in the erection of a
concrete structure can only be made if the thermal behaviour and strength of the
concrete can be predicted during hydration. This thesis describes the development
of a low cost, computer controlled, adiabatic calorimeter to determine tlte heat of
hydration and a probe to determine the thermal conductivity or concrere samples.
The main thrust of this thesis is the development of the thermal conductivity probe
which, for the first time, can measure the thermal conductivity of concrete through
all stages of hydration. A thermal model was also developed to verify the results,
and the use of the calorimeter for temperature matched curing tests is also discussed.
Results, obtained from the test procedures described, will provide far more accurate
predictions of the temperatures in concrete structures than was possible in the past.Andrew Chakane 201
Employee Disclosures to the Media: When Is a Source a Sourcerer
Whistleblowing as a form of organizational control is being fostered by the judiciary and legislators. Yet these decisionmakers generally do not view the media as an appropriate whistleblowing recipient. This point was brought into sharp focus when Procter & Gamble persuaded law enforcement agencies to investigate the source of information leaked by current and former P&G managers to the Wall Street Journal. Armed with alleged violations of a state trade secrets statute, the corporation and the government effectively bypassed legal protections extended both to whistleblowers and to reporters who refuse to identify their confidential sources. This article evaluates whistleblowing to the media from the perspective of a number of policy objectives. The approaches of Congress, state legislatures, the courts, and arbitrators are examined, as is the interaction between the law governing trade secrets and whistleblowing. The authors recommend changing current legal approaches to whistleblowing to the media