Browsing 1. Law and Regulation by Title
Now showing items 22-36 of 36
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Negotiations as a means of developing and implementing environmental and occupational health and safety policy
(Harvard Environmental Law Review, 1999) -
Nicholas Ashford on Regulation and Innovation
(2018-05-24) -
Porter Debate Stuck in 1970's
(1999) -
Rethinking the role of information in chemicals policy: implications for TSCA and REACH
(Journal of Cleaner Production, 2006) -
The Role of Changes in Statutory/Tort Law and Liability in Preventing and Compensating Damages from Future Releases of Hazardous Waste
(The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1987-10) -
Science and Values in the Regulatory Process
(Statistical Science, 1988)This article provides a framework for consideration of values in the use of science in the regulatory process. The science in question includes both the assessment of technologic risk and the assessment of technologic ... -
Scientific, ethical and legal challenges in work-related genetic testing in the United States
(European Journal of Oncology Library, 2005)Human monitoring in the workplace, sometimes referred to as medical screening, is a collation of practices that focuses on the workers as an indicator that: 1) disease may result on exposure to a toxic substance, radiation, ... -
Trade Policy
(2014)In an otherwise insightful and thoughtful article, Sebastian Pfotenhauer (Trade Policy Is Science Policy,” Issues, Fall 2013) might better have entitled his contribution “Trade Policy Needs to Be Reconciled with Science ... -
Universal basic income and inclusive capitalism: consequences for sustainability
(Sustainability, 2019-08-19)Over the past forty years, income growth for the middle and lower classes has stagnated, while the economy (and with it, economic inequality) has grown significantly. Early automation, the decline of labor unions, changes ... -
The Use of Technical Information in Environmental, Health, and Safety Regulation: A Brief Guide to the Issues
(Science, Technology & Human Values, 1984) -
Using Regulation to change the Market for Innovation
(Harvard Environmental Law Review, 1985)