YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Workplace Drug Use and Misuse
Essays 511 - 540
to working practices to try and turn a failed company around, In this case there was no award made to the employee,...
that the American workplace, and indeed the world workplace in general, has undergone tremendous changes in just a relative short ...
addiction and withdrawal symptoms, most of the current data suggests otherwise. The metabolic half-life of these drugs tend to cyc...
gender as just one of womens many identities (2002). Many young women do not want to be labeled feminists (2002). Although the int...
IBMs corporate culture is rather rigid. It is not a creative organization but rather a mainstay in the computer industry. While Ol...
them can improve both input and output. The worker who is satisfied with their working hours will not only be more mentally dedic...
be generally accepted as well (and perhaps somewhat paradoxically) that, if there is a time lag between the first piece of informa...
to predict behavior in the work place when placed in situations where this event may, either consciously or subconsciously, deter ...
workplace stress in terms of offering stress management courses for fear of opening themselves to potential lawsuits. DeF...
below this mark in an emerging market. An emerging market is "a country making an effort to change and improve its economy ...
related industries such as welfare and social workers. This theory was expanded by other theorists to cover deviance and conflic...
that became known as "crack" cocaine, which is cocaine in its purist form (Marcocci, 2002). After its first appearance, crack quic...
the people are traditional and spiritual. Yet, the nation is entrenched in an atmosphere of sex and drugs. The sex trade thrives...
city" (Duke, 2000, 3). Most people became familiar with such locations during the 1960s and 1970s when the so-called "white flight...
playful" by groping the private parts of women, are no longer able to get away with such behavior. Yet, the society has gone furth...
background, the points which Gray (2001) makes are surprising to say the least. Gray (2001) sees the war we as a society are wagi...
technology in general. The ease with which personal information can be unscrupulously gleaned from the multitude of computerized ...
are made. The company employees in the region of 150 staff and runs two shifts, one starting in the early morning, one starting la...
situations, no one actually comes out and says an employee is not promoted because of gender, but in a study conducted during the ...
but one that is virtually a given is that conditions will change. Only the organization that can keep pace with changing customer...
were robbed in the workplace. Between 1994 and 1996 violent victimizations in the workplace decreased by 21 percent, paralleling a...
he used to own and wear while he was working. The fact that Tom wore a tuxedo while performing suggests that he played at the best...
lack of attention will begin to break down the trees very foundation. Soon, employee problems begin to manifest in the form of hi...
be interpreted before looking at the bigger picture so that the movements and trends may be paced in a wider context and assessed ...
customer inquiries and concerns (Olsten Forum Reports, 2002). And, in terms of organizational culture, the Internet allows compani...
that the employer is hiring or promoting less than the expected number of minority groups then the burden will shift to the employ...
so medical and dental coverage from an employer for the employees. Entitlements on the other hand are more so agreements which exi...
money flits around the world has brought more good than harm" (Moberg 18). While the globalization of the Information Technology ...
back to rationality and politics (and the fact Stone believes the two cant be combined), she notes that the theoretical rational d...
Clearly, even the World Health Organization cannot succinctly define "drug abuse" in a manner that is able to be consistently appl...