38,387 research outputs found
Motivating a volunteer workforce in the criminal justice system
The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (OPCAT) requires that police detention processes are monitored and inspected. The United Kingdom is partially ensuring this provision through the use of an existing independent volunteer workforce. This research explores the conditions required for the effective use of this volunteer workforce through 12 semi-structured interviews. An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis was used that initially generated 46 motivator codes that were clustered into six themes of volunteer motivation consisting of: personal affect, personal growth, social goals, altruistic, activity and values. Ten demotivators were also revealed through the interviews. The implications of these findings for volunteer motivation and how organisations may capitalise on this are discusse
Final-Offer Arbitration and Salaries of Police and Firefighters
[Excerpt] Did final-offer arbitration have a discernible impact on the salaries of police and firefighters in Massachusetts during the 3-year trial period which ended June 30, 1977? To analyze this question, we collected information on the maximum salary paid to police patrolmen, police sergeants, firefighters, and fire lieutenants for a large sample of Massachusetts municipalities. We integrated these data with police and fire impasse experiences and added several economic and environmental characteristics for each Massachusetts municipality. Then we performed several tests of the economic impact of final-offer arbitration
Euler Incognito
The nonlinear flow equations discussed recently by Bender and Feinberg are
all reduced to the well-known Euler equation after change of variables.Comment: 2 page
Motivating a volunteer workforce in the criminal justice system
The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (OPCAT) requires that police detention processes are monitored and inspected. The United Kingdom is partially ensuring this provision through the use of an existing independent volunteer workforce. This research explores the conditions required for the effective use of this volunteer workforce through 12 semi-structured interviews. An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis was used that initially generated 46 motivator codes that were clustered into six themes of volunteer motivation consisting of: personal affect, personal growth, social goals, altruistic, activity and values. Ten demotivators were also revealed through the interviews. The implications of these findings for volunteer motivation and how organisations may capitalise on this are discusse
Conceptual Foundations: Walton and McKersie\u27s Subprocesses of Negotiations
[Excerpt] Walton and McKersie\u27s 1965 book, A Behavioral Theory of Labor Negotiations, provides much of the conceptual underpinnings of what grew into the modern-day teaching of negotiations in business, public policy, law, and other professional schools. We therefore believe that it is useful to outline the basic concepts and ideas introduced by these authors. We do so, however, with a word of caution. There is no substitute for the original. Every student should have the pleasure of struggling (as we did the first time it was assigned to us as students) with the tongue twisters like attitudinal structuring and the many other new terms and theoretical ideas introduced in the book
Final-Offer Arbitration and Public-Safety Employees: The Massachusetts Experience
[Excerpt] We conclude that, in terms of its impact on the bargaining process, final-offer arbitration has had a mixed record in Massachusetts. On the one hand, the law must probably be given some credit for preventing police and firefighter strikes; in addition, the rate of arbitration usage was remarkably low compared to experience in other states. On the other hand, the law probably led to more impasses in police and fire bargaining (although the experience in the commonwealth was still favorable compared to other states) and reduced the effectiveness of the mediation stage of the impasse procedures. Perhaps most important, the law failed to gain acceptance with municipal employers in the commonwealth
Computing General Relativistic effects from Newtonian N-body simulations: Frame dragging in the post-Friedmann approach
We present the first calculation of an intrinsically relativistic quantity in
fully non-linear cosmolog- ical large-scale structure studies. Traditionally,
non-linear structure formation in standard {\Lambda}CDM cosmology is studied
using N-body simulations, based on Newtonian gravitational dynamics on an
expanding background. When one derives the Newtonian regime in a way that is a
consistent ap- proximation to the Einstein equations, a gravito-magnetic vector
potential - giving rise to frame dragging - is present in the metric in
addition to the usual Newtonian scalar potential. At leading order, this vector
potential does not affect the matter dynamics, thus it can be computed from
Newtonian N-body simulations. We explain how we compute the vector potential
from simulations in {\Lambda}CDM and examine its magnitude relative to the
scalar potential. We also discuss some possible observable effects.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figur
A Domain Specific Approach to High Performance Heterogeneous Computing
Users of heterogeneous computing systems face two problems: firstly, in
understanding the trade-off relationships between the observable
characteristics of their applications, such as latency and quality of the
result, and secondly, how to exploit knowledge of these characteristics to
allocate work to distributed computing platforms efficiently. A domain specific
approach addresses both of these problems. By considering a subset of
operations or functions, models of the observable characteristics or domain
metrics may be formulated in advance, and populated at run-time for task
instances. These metric models can then be used to express the allocation of
work as a constrained integer program, which can be solved using heuristics,
machine learning or Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) frameworks. These
claims are illustrated using the example domain of derivatives pricing in
computational finance, with the domain metrics of workload latency or makespan
and pricing accuracy. For a large, varied workload of 128 Black-Scholes and
Heston model-based option pricing tasks, running upon a diverse array of 16
Multicore CPUs, GPUs and FPGAs platforms, predictions made by models of both
the makespan and accuracy are generally within 10% of the run-time performance.
When these models are used as inputs to machine learning and MILP-based
workload allocation approaches, a latency improvement of up to 24 and 270 times
over the heuristic approach is seen.Comment: 14 pages, preprint draft, minor revisio
Report of the Georgia Governor’s Wokers’ Compensation Review Commission
The Commission appointed by Governor Barnes consists of fourteen members, three ex officio members, and seven advisory members. This group includes academics, members of the legislature, claimants attorneys, defense attorneys, representatives from the insurance industry, organized labor, the textile industry, and government agencies. It was charged by the Governor to review and evaluate Georgia’s laws and procedures affecting workers’ compensation. The Commission’s primary goal was to prepare an accurate description of the current workers’ compensation system in Georgia. More specifically, this Report provides detailed information regarding the number of claims, benefits paid to employees, employer costs, and insurance profitability. It also compares workers’ compensation costs and benefits in Georgia with those in other states, particularly our Southeastern neighbors. Our purpose is to determine whether workers’ compensation costs place Georgia employers at a competitive disadvantage in regional and national markets. In preparing this Report, the Commission relied on the most recent available reports and data collected by organizations such as the National Academy of Social Insurance, the National Council on Compensation Insurance, the Workers Compensation Research Institute, the United States Department of Labor, and the Georgia State Board of Workers’ Compensation.Workers' Compemsation, wages, unemployment, disability, indemnity
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