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Post by arfanho7 on Feb 27, 2024 11:10:13 GMT
“This workshop was a gold mine of new contacts information and studies ” he says. One paper that Silberman found particularly interesting looked at private sector supply chain audits. In the study coauthored by Toffel University of California law professor Jodi Short and HBS doctoral student Andrea Hugill examined factors such as whether it was more effective to send the same auditors back to a company or send new auditors with each audit. The answer Audit teams revisiting the same suppliers generally found fewer violations. “WHEN YOU GET A REPORT WITH THE CREDIBILITY OF A TRUE ACADEMIC ANALYSIS IT Hungary Phone Number CHANGES THE ENTIRE ENVIRONMENT” “You would think that as auditors gain more experience they’d become better at identifying noncompliance but Jodi explained that they found the opposite was true ” says Silberman who also found the study to be a useful source of related research. At the same time Silberman and EPA colleague for innovation and next generation compliance urged the researchers to look more closely at issues such as how continuous monitoring—such as by putting an automated pollution meter at a factory’s fence line—compares to actual inspections in gaining compliance. Toffel agrees “The question of which approach is more effective is a perfect one for scholars to pursue. I hope someone will take up that project.” One side benefit to the workshop was that regulators shared knowledge among themselves as well as with the academics.
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