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Academic Journals
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From:Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand (Vol. 15, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedVic Moffatt, in his letter "Are male nurses under siege?" (Kai Tiaki Nursing New Zealand, November 2009, p3), raises an important point that men in nursing are disproportionately represented in disciplinary proceedings....
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From:Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand (Vol. 26, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedAs student nurses entering a clinical setting, we expect to observe registered nurses (RNs) upholding ethical and legal standards of practice. When witnessing unethical or unprofessional practice, students--with the...
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From:Ophthalmology Times (Vol. 32, Issue 19) Peer-ReviewedKansas City, MO -- Terminating the employment of a worker may be unrivaled as one of the most stressful, emotional parts of your job, according to Carol A. Poindexter, JD, partner, Shook, Hardy, & Bacon LLP, Kansas...
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From:The CPA Journal (Vol. 85, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedState boards of accountancy play an important role in protecting the public interest by licensing qualified professionals and disciplining them if they fail to comply with relevant standards. This safeguards the value...
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From:Ophthalmology Times (Vol. 40, Issue 13) Peer-ReviewedMy administrator wants the clinic managers to get together soon to discuss the employee handbook. It seems to be that time again. When a new employee is hired, we discuss what the handbook says, and then we review...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 49, Issue 19)Byline: HAIM WATZMAN A woman who was suspended from Safed College, in Israel's Galilee region, on the basis of accusations that she had failed to prevent a suicide bombing is demanding to be reinstated. The college...
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From:Nursing Standard (Vol. 20, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedSuspensions are dished out unnecessarily and cause extreme distress for nurses involved, a campaigning nurse has told the Department of Health (DH). Craig Longstaff wrote to NHS chief executive Sir Nigel Crisp...
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From:Family Practice News (Vol. 33, Issue 9)States out west and in the heartland did the best job of administering disciplinary actions against physicians in 2002, Public Citizen reports in its ranking of the medical boards of the 50 states and Washington, D.C....
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From:Public Personnel Management (Vol. 32, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedUsing data from 298 disciplinary action records of employees with the City of Albuquerque (New Mexico) Public Works Department from 1995-1999, the researchers examined the use of employee-proposed discipline as provided...
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From:Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand (Vol. 22, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe world's media had eyes on New Zealand for all the wrong reasons on Waitangi Day. Not because of controversy about John Key's absence from Waitangi due to tensions around the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 80, Issue 3)Law enforcement supervisors have two primary responsibilities in molding productive, well-disciplined officers: rewarding good behavior and correcting poor performance. (1) Fortunately, most officers support the...
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From:Strategic Finance (Vol. 90, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAs I read the 62 cases presented in Fraud Casebook: Lessons from the Bad Side of Business, edited by Joseph T. Wells, I was faced with the reality that fraudsters are hard to spot because they frequently look just like...
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From:Nursing Standard (Vol. 20, Issue 45) Peer-ReviewedA nurse cleared of wrongdoing after being suspended on full pay for 16 months has vowed never to work for the NHS again. Julie Fagan (left) is disillusioned because of her experience and says NHS mismanagement of...
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From:Employee Relations Law Journal (Vol. 35, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedTo establish a violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII), must a plaintiff show that a similarly situated person outside of the protected class committed exactly the same offense, but was...
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From:Journal of Managerial Issues (Vol. 18, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedOver twenty years ago, Peters and Waterman posited that the best-run companies had simultaneous "loose-tight" properties, where the organization is "rigidly controlled, yet at the same time autonomy, entrepreneurship...
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From:Occupational Health (Issue 63) Peer-ReviewedThe OH unit at Bradford Metropolitan District Council (BMDC) has introduced a pilot scheme where local GPs collaborate with OH advisers, HR staff and line managers to cut down on sickness absence among the authority's...
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From:Capital & Class (Issue 91) Peer-ReviewedPrisons and crime are still widely seen as concerning fields of state action that are distinct from social or labour-market policy. This article looks at the way neoconservative attacks on the remnants of the Keynesian...
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From:Nursing Standard (Vol. 18, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedMANY NURSES accused of wrongdoing should be moved to other duties rather than suspended, the government's spending watchdog said last week. The National Audit Office (NAO) said the NHS wastes millions of pounds a...
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From:Duke Law Journal (Vol. 68, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT A prime focus of police-reform advocates is the transparency of police discipline. Indeed, transparency is one of, the most popular accountability solutions for a wide swath of policing problems. This...
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From:Nursing Standard (Vol. 22, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedHealth minister Ivan Lewis has warned nurses that they will face disciplinary action if they fail to meet patients' nutritional needs. His comments accompanied publication last week of the government's Nutrition...