This working paper is part of a proposed larger work on individual culpability for corporate OHS offences. It is therefore not fully self-contained. It may be useful to read first the companion working paper, “The Gretley Coal Mine Disaster: Reflections on the Finding that Mine Managers were to Blame.” The present paper deals with some of the arguments mounted by business groups following the Gretley convictions. Comments and corrections are invited
In the past quarter of a century there has been a significant evolution in the style and form of occ...
Introduction ....From the late 1970s in Australia, and particularly during the 1980s, Australian OH...
This paper addresses the catastrophic Westray mine disaster that rocked the East Coast of Canada in ...
This is truly a working paper, a step along the way in a larger project that is intended to culminat...
For historical and arguably pragmatic reasons, the mining industry in Queensland has always been the...
[Conclusion] We have explored two dimensions of the Australian OHS statutes which enable statutory O...
The two Reports of the National Review into Model Occupational Health and Safety Laws (the First Rep...
This paper examines the role of mining regulation and its enforcement, principally in Western Austra...
Since the 1980s the calls for further criminalisation of organisational conduct causing harm to work...
When an employee is accused of engaging in a deviant act by his/her employer, natural justice afford...
This article explores the operation of regulatory provisions for worker occupational health and safe...
The aims of the Centre are to: • conduct and facilitate high quality empirical and policy-focused re...
© 1993 David ParkerThis study is an examination of the various aspects of the criminal liability of ...
This research report: 1. Identifies the ‘architecture’ of corporate OHS management around which the...
Section 26 of the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2000 (NSW) (like similar provisions in other Au...
In the past quarter of a century there has been a significant evolution in the style and form of occ...
Introduction ....From the late 1970s in Australia, and particularly during the 1980s, Australian OH...
This paper addresses the catastrophic Westray mine disaster that rocked the East Coast of Canada in ...
This is truly a working paper, a step along the way in a larger project that is intended to culminat...
For historical and arguably pragmatic reasons, the mining industry in Queensland has always been the...
[Conclusion] We have explored two dimensions of the Australian OHS statutes which enable statutory O...
The two Reports of the National Review into Model Occupational Health and Safety Laws (the First Rep...
This paper examines the role of mining regulation and its enforcement, principally in Western Austra...
Since the 1980s the calls for further criminalisation of organisational conduct causing harm to work...
When an employee is accused of engaging in a deviant act by his/her employer, natural justice afford...
This article explores the operation of regulatory provisions for worker occupational health and safe...
The aims of the Centre are to: • conduct and facilitate high quality empirical and policy-focused re...
© 1993 David ParkerThis study is an examination of the various aspects of the criminal liability of ...
This research report: 1. Identifies the ‘architecture’ of corporate OHS management around which the...
Section 26 of the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2000 (NSW) (like similar provisions in other Au...
In the past quarter of a century there has been a significant evolution in the style and form of occ...
Introduction ....From the late 1970s in Australia, and particularly during the 1980s, Australian OH...
This paper addresses the catastrophic Westray mine disaster that rocked the East Coast of Canada in ...