Georgians for a Healthy Future's (GHF) 2015 policy agenda focused on closing Georgia's coverage gap, ensuring access to quality healthcare for Medicaid and PeachCare beneficiaries, maximizing enrollment and a positive consumer experience for private health insurance, increasing Georgia's tobacco tax, and reinvesting in public health. The presentation provided background on these issues, GHF's role in advocating for related policies, and resources for attendees to get involved in the legislative process through advocacy opportunities like meeting with their legislators.
The document summarizes an upcoming conference on battery metals in Beijing, China from September 7-8, 2016. Prices for lithium carbonate have tripled in the past year due to tight supplies and strong demand from the electric vehicle and energy storage sectors. While lithium demand is growing rapidly, driven by batteries, supply is struggling to keep up, which is expected to result in an undersupplied market. The conference will discuss trends in the battery metals industry including lithium production and projects, supply and demand drivers, and changing Chinese regulations. It aims to help participants make informed business decisions regarding opportunities and risks in the growing battery metals sector.
This document discusses the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 in India. It was established to better protect consumer interests based on UN guidelines. The key aims are to protect consumer health and safety, provide effective community redressal forums, and offer cheap and speedy remedies. The act established quasi-judicial bodies like district, state, and national commissions to handle consumer complaints regarding defective products or services. It provides a framework for complaints, appeals, penalties, and covers areas like medical services. The commissions can offer consumers specific reliefs and compensation. The statute of limitations for complaints is two years.
The Consumer Protection Act was introduced in 1986 to better protect consumers in India. It established a three-tier system for consumer dispute redressal at the district, state and national levels to provide simple and speedy remedies to consumer complaints. The act defines consumers and covers goods and services, including healthcare. It aims to make consumers aware of their rights and provides recourse in the form of consumer courts. Recent amendments in 2019 have strengthened provisions regarding product liability, mediation and regulation of misleading advertisements. Continued awareness among healthcare professionals about their obligations under this legislation is important.
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Georgians for a Healthy Future's (GHF) 2015 policy agenda focused on closing Georgia's coverage gap, ensuring access to quality healthcare for Medicaid and PeachCare beneficiaries, maximizing enrollment and a positive consumer experience for private health insurance, increasing Georgia's tobacco tax, and reinvesting in public health. The presentation provided background on these issues, GHF's role in advocating for related policies, and resources for attendees to get involved in the legislative process through advocacy opportunities like meeting with their legislators.
The document summarizes an upcoming conference on battery metals in Beijing, China from September 7-8, 2016. Prices for lithium carbonate have tripled in the past year due to tight supplies and strong demand from the electric vehicle and energy storage sectors. While lithium demand is growing rapidly, driven by batteries, supply is struggling to keep up, which is expected to result in an undersupplied market. The conference will discuss trends in the battery metals industry including lithium production and projects, supply and demand drivers, and changing Chinese regulations. It aims to help participants make informed business decisions regarding opportunities and risks in the growing battery metals sector.
This document discusses the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 in India. It was established to better protect consumer interests based on UN guidelines. The key aims are to protect consumer health and safety, provide effective community redressal forums, and offer cheap and speedy remedies. The act established quasi-judicial bodies like district, state, and national commissions to handle consumer complaints regarding defective products or services. It provides a framework for complaints, appeals, penalties, and covers areas like medical services. The commissions can offer consumers specific reliefs and compensation. The statute of limitations for complaints is two years.
The Consumer Protection Act was introduced in 1986 to better protect consumers in India. It established a three-tier system for consumer dispute redressal at the district, state and national levels to provide simple and speedy remedies to consumer complaints. The act defines consumers and covers goods and services, including healthcare. It aims to make consumers aware of their rights and provides recourse in the form of consumer courts. Recent amendments in 2019 have strengthened provisions regarding product liability, mediation and regulation of misleading advertisements. Continued awareness among healthcare professionals about their obligations under this legislation is important.
Solicitors Undertakings Webinar July 2022Jonathon Bray
This document discusses undertakings in the legal profession. It defines an undertaking as a commitment by a solicitor to do or refrain from doing something. Undertakings are important because they are enforceable by courts and the Solicitors Regulation Authority. The document provides tips for properly giving, receiving, and documenting undertakings to avoid enforcement actions.
Sharon Daly, head of the Commercial Litigation Insurance team at Matheson, wrote the Ireland chapter for Getting The Deal Through: Litigation Funding 2017.
This document outlines the key elements of a Contract Law course, including lectures, seminars, assessments, course texts, and expectations. It discusses the sources of contract law, defines what a contract is, and covers the essential elements for a valid contract such as offer, acceptance, intention, and consideration. It also addresses formation of contracts and defenses such as mistake, misrepresentation and frustration. Examples of different types of contracts and cases are provided.
What Every Realtor Needs to Know about Estate Planning & Probate and Selling ...Paul Saba
This document provides an overview of the legal services offered by Stagnaro, Saba & Patterson, Co. L.P.A., a full service law firm. It discusses their practice areas, which include wills, trusts, estate planning, real estate, corporate law, and various types of litigation. It also provides brief summaries of probate processes, estate planning tools like powers of attorney and trusts, and estate and gift tax laws. Key details include how probate works, ways to avoid probate, an overview of intestacy laws, and the use of trusts and other strategies for asset protection and tax planning.
Medical profession and consumer protection act:
In past Doctors were considered as God and earned respect but with Commercialization and globalization ; Relationship has deteriorated considerably.With empowerment of Consumer Protection Act in 1986, litigation against doctors is on the increase.Every medical professional should have basic knowledge of the act to protect himself or herself from the fake allegation or any medical mishap.
This document discusses various consumer protection laws in New Zealand related to contracts, sales, and fair trading practices. It covers the Law of Contract, Layby Sales Act, Unsolicited Goods and Services Act, Commerce Act, Fair Trading Act, Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act, and Consumer Guarantees Act. Key points include that contracts must have an offer, acceptance, and consideration; layby sales allow purchase of goods by installment payments; unsolicited goods sent remain the property of the sender unless accepted; and the Fair Trading Act prohibits misleading practices and requires guarantees on goods and services.
The newsletter provides updates on recent legal developments that may affect clients. It summarizes a recent Supreme Court ruling that clarified dishonesty in financial divorce proceedings will not be tolerated. It also outlines new regulations affecting section 21 eviction notices for rental properties. Additionally, it discusses a court case where a woman challenged her mother's will and was awarded £163,000.
This document provides information and instructions for EEA-qualified pharmacists applying for recognition as a pharmacist in Great Britain by the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC). The GPhC is the regulatory body that oversees pharmacists and pharmacy technicians in Great Britain. Applicants must submit documentation including proof of qualifications, identity, nationality, registration status in their home country, and fees. Required documents include diplomas, licenses, passport, birth certificate, marriage certificate if applicable, police records, and letters from authorities confirming standing and compliance with EU directives. Photographs must be certified by a professional acquaintance. All documents may require certified English translations. The process is expected to take one month, after which eligible applicants will receive a
Getting the deal through: Life Sciences Ireland 2019Matheson Law Firm
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This document provides information for first home buyers on various finance options available. It discusses property-backed secured loans, asset-backed secured loans, and unsecured loans available through BIR Solutions. It also defines key terminology like LVR and LMI. The document provides an overview of assistance available for first home buyers in Victoria including grants, stamp duty exemptions, the First Home Super Saver Scheme, and the First Home Loan Deposit Scheme. Tips are provided on saving for a deposit, getting pre-approval, and choosing a reputable broker to assist with the financing process.
Consumer protection act in medical profession srsSreeraj S R
This document discusses consumer protection rights and the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 as they relate to the medical profession in India. It outlines the eight rights defined by the International Organization of Consumers' Union, including the rights to safety, being informed, and redress. The key points are that the 1986 Act established a three-tier quasi-judicial system for consumer disputes resolution at the district, state, and national levels. It also discusses the powers and roles of the consumer forums, provisions for appeals, and adjudication and redressal processes.
The document discusses the need for consumer protection laws in India. It provides context on the enactment of the Consumer Protection Act in 1986 and establishes three-tier quasi-judicial system for redressal of consumer complaints. Key definitions include consumer, goods, services and complaint. The rights of consumers such as safety, choice, information, hearing and redressal are outlined. The responsibilities of consumers and importance of consumer protection for business organizations are also highlighted. Case studies within India and abroad are presented to illustrate how the law has been implemented.
The document discusses the need for consumer protection laws in India's free market system. It provides background on the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 and establishes consumer forums to address disputes. It defines key terms like consumer, goods, services, and complaint. The objectives of the Act are to protect consumers from exploitation and unfair trade practices. It outlines the rights of consumers such as safety, choice, information, redressal and education. The responsibilities of consumers are also mentioned.
This document provides guidance on obtaining valid consent and assessing mental capacity. It discusses the importance of ensuring patients understand procedures and risks before obtaining consent. It outlines key principles from the Mental Health Act and Mental Capacity Act, such as assessing capacity and determining best interests. The document also describes types of consent forms, roles like IMCA advocates, and powers like LPAs. It includes examples of how to quantify and qualify risks to patients. Finally, it provides answers to sample cases related to valid consent and mental capacity.
On Saturday, May 4, 2013, the Sino-American Biomedical & Pharmaceutical Professionals Association (SABPA) held its 8th Annual Biomedical Forum. The forum focused on career development, entrepreneurship and the latest innovations in pharma/biotech and medical devices industries. The biomedical forum strives to provide an attractive platform for entrepreneurs, scientists, engineers, investors, executives, and policy makers to promote life sciences, biotech, medical device and alliances across the biomedical industry in Southern California and Asian countries. Knobbe Martens Partner Terry Tullis presented on “Commercialization and Patent Infringement.”
The Consumer Protection Act 1986 was enacted to better protect the interests of consumers, protect consumer rights, and provide simple, speedy and inexpensive redressal to consumer disputes. The key rights established for consumers include the right to be protected against unfair trade practices, the right to be informed about product quality and pricing, the right to choice and competitive pricing, the right to be heard, and the right to seek redressal. The Act covers all goods and services across private, public and cooperative sectors. It defines key terms and establishes a three-tier quasi-judicial mechanism for consumer dispute redressal at the district, state and national levels.
Ll.b ii lot ii u-iii consumer protection act Rai University
The Consumer Protection Act was enacted in 1986 and came into effect in 1987 to protect consumer interests and rights. It aims to provide better protection of consumer interests through the establishment of consumer councils and protection of consumer rights. The act defines key terms like consumer, complaint, unfair trade practices, and deficient services. It gives consumers the right to be protected from hazardous goods, the right to information about product quality, and the right to seek redressal against unfair trade practices through the appropriate forums.
1 BLOCK 1 TRIMESTER 1 2018 TLAW 101 – BUSINESS LAW – ASSI.docxhoney725342
1
BLOCK 1 TRIMESTER 1 2018: TLAW 101 – BUSINESS LAW – ASSIGNMENT QUESTIONS
Assessment Details
Due date: Friday, 6 April 2018 11-59 PM IN TURNITIN
Weighting: 30%
Length: 1500 words (+/- 10%), correctly referenced
Objectives
Answer the following questions with reference to the relevant common law and equity
principles operating in Australia concerning contracts plus related and other transactions. Do
not consider the effects of legislation potentially applicable other than that specifically
identified. Students may make whatever additional factual and/or legal assumptions are
necessary or convenient. And students must write about 1500 words (+/- 10%), or about 750
(+/- 10%) words per 15 mark allocation.
Assessment Task
Question 1 15 Marks
The University of Millennia called for tenders for supplies of green seed for its surrounds, with
a closing date of 1 June.
The following tenders were submitted:
• Greenland hand-delivered its tender on 29 May, which went into the tender box.
• Enviro posted its tender on 15 May. This letter was received by the University on 17 May,
but, by being submitted so early, one of the administrative assistants filed it with the
intention of later putting it in the box when she was properly organised.
• Plant Forever posted its tender on 30 May. This letter arrived on 2 June but nevertheless
was put into the tender box.
It transpired that only two of the tenders were considered by the relevant administrative
officials of the University. Although the tender by Enviro was the lowest and contained the
most attractive features, the administrative assistant forgot where she had filed it and did not
find it again until a week after the decision was made.
Greenland’s tender was the next lowest, but because of rumours about its unreliability, the
University awarded the contract to Plant Forever. The University posted a letter to Plant
Forever advising that its tender was successful. Unfortunately, this letter never reached Plant
Forever because it was destroyed by a disgruntled postal worker who had just been made
redundant. Since it had not heard from the University, Plant Forever instead committed its
full stock of seed to another contract with a regional council.
The University became aware of the full situation concerning the tender by Enviro and the
position in which Plant Forever now finds itself. It seeks advice concerning its contractual
position in relation to all three tenders.
2
Question 2 15 Marks
On 1 October Footloose Pty Ltd placed the following notice in the Daily News newspaper:
Special Shoes Special Discounts
Footloose Pty Ltd is awaiting the delivery of the latest summer collection shoes from Italy.
Styles include the new slingback sandals and wedge heels. Prices start at $2000 per hundred
pairs (ce ...
The document summarizes a conference and exhibition for National Landlord Day 2018 held on November 13th. It provides an agenda for breakout sessions on various landlord-related topics such as dispute resolution, landlord insurance, handling difficult tenant situations, and reducing costs for letting agents in implementing the letting agent code. The document encourages attendees to visit exhibitor stands during the lunch break and lists the locations for future breakout sessions after lunch resumes at 1:40pm.
Useful Information Ab. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Fields
The document provides instructions for requesting writing help from HelpWriting.net in 5 steps:
1. Create an account with a password and email.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline.
3. Choose a writer based on their bid, qualifications, and feedback.
4. Review the paper and authorize payment if satisfied.
5. Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a full refund option for plagiarism.
This document provides information about eligibility criteria, application processes, and funding opportunities for an innovation funding competition run by Innovate UK.
It outlines the eligibility requirements for organizations, projects, costs, and funding levels. Applicants must submit their applications through the Innovation Funding Service, which allows lead applicants to create accounts and invite collaborators. The document reviews the application questions, finances that can be claimed, and provides a worked example of funding calculations for a consortium project. It also provides brief information about using the Je-S system for collecting costs from academic partners.
John Rose and Kevin Caden are the managing director and director, respectively, of Iza Wealth, an independently owned South African financial advisory firm that offers holistic, objective offshore investment solutions. John has over 20 years of experience in healthcare, financial services, and wealth management. Kevin has 10 years of experience in asset management and financial regulation in Ireland and South Africa. Iza Wealth's team of advisors assists clients with offshore investment portfolios focused on foreign exchange, offshore investments, and retirement/estate planning. The document then discusses the potential effects of Brexit on South Africa and outlines four scenarios for how Brexit could impact trade between the UK and South Africa.
· Present a discussion of what team is. What type(s) of team do .docxalinainglis
· Present a discussion of what team is. What type(s) of team do you have in your organization?
· What is meant by the “internal processes” of a team? Why is it important to manage both the internal processes and external opportunities/constraints of a team?
Note: It should contain 3 pages with citation included and References should be in APA format
.
· Presentation of your project. Prepare a PowerPoint with 8 slid.docxalinainglis
· Presentation of your project. Prepare a PowerPoint with 8 slides illustrating the role in Interdisciplinary care for our aging population (Outcome 1,2,3,4,5) (6 hours).
Make sure it has nursing diagnosis
make sure it's a APA STYLE
make sure it has reference
.
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What Every Realtor Needs to Know about Estate Planning & Probate and Selling ...Paul Saba
This document provides an overview of the legal services offered by Stagnaro, Saba & Patterson, Co. L.P.A., a full service law firm. It discusses their practice areas, which include wills, trusts, estate planning, real estate, corporate law, and various types of litigation. It also provides brief summaries of probate processes, estate planning tools like powers of attorney and trusts, and estate and gift tax laws. Key details include how probate works, ways to avoid probate, an overview of intestacy laws, and the use of trusts and other strategies for asset protection and tax planning.
Medical profession and consumer protection act:
In past Doctors were considered as God and earned respect but with Commercialization and globalization ; Relationship has deteriorated considerably.With empowerment of Consumer Protection Act in 1986, litigation against doctors is on the increase.Every medical professional should have basic knowledge of the act to protect himself or herself from the fake allegation or any medical mishap.
This document discusses various consumer protection laws in New Zealand related to contracts, sales, and fair trading practices. It covers the Law of Contract, Layby Sales Act, Unsolicited Goods and Services Act, Commerce Act, Fair Trading Act, Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act, and Consumer Guarantees Act. Key points include that contracts must have an offer, acceptance, and consideration; layby sales allow purchase of goods by installment payments; unsolicited goods sent remain the property of the sender unless accepted; and the Fair Trading Act prohibits misleading practices and requires guarantees on goods and services.
The newsletter provides updates on recent legal developments that may affect clients. It summarizes a recent Supreme Court ruling that clarified dishonesty in financial divorce proceedings will not be tolerated. It also outlines new regulations affecting section 21 eviction notices for rental properties. Additionally, it discusses a court case where a woman challenged her mother's will and was awarded £163,000.
This document provides information and instructions for EEA-qualified pharmacists applying for recognition as a pharmacist in Great Britain by the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC). The GPhC is the regulatory body that oversees pharmacists and pharmacy technicians in Great Britain. Applicants must submit documentation including proof of qualifications, identity, nationality, registration status in their home country, and fees. Required documents include diplomas, licenses, passport, birth certificate, marriage certificate if applicable, police records, and letters from authorities confirming standing and compliance with EU directives. Photographs must be certified by a professional acquaintance. All documents may require certified English translations. The process is expected to take one month, after which eligible applicants will receive a
Getting the deal through: Life Sciences Ireland 2019Matheson Law Firm
Matheson Life Sciences partners Michael Finn and Emma Doherty write on Life Sciences regulation in Ireland and provide an update on legislation and trends in the sector.
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This document provides information for first home buyers on various finance options available. It discusses property-backed secured loans, asset-backed secured loans, and unsecured loans available through BIR Solutions. It also defines key terminology like LVR and LMI. The document provides an overview of assistance available for first home buyers in Victoria including grants, stamp duty exemptions, the First Home Super Saver Scheme, and the First Home Loan Deposit Scheme. Tips are provided on saving for a deposit, getting pre-approval, and choosing a reputable broker to assist with the financing process.
Consumer protection act in medical profession srsSreeraj S R
This document discusses consumer protection rights and the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 as they relate to the medical profession in India. It outlines the eight rights defined by the International Organization of Consumers' Union, including the rights to safety, being informed, and redress. The key points are that the 1986 Act established a three-tier quasi-judicial system for consumer disputes resolution at the district, state, and national levels. It also discusses the powers and roles of the consumer forums, provisions for appeals, and adjudication and redressal processes.
The document discusses the need for consumer protection laws in India. It provides context on the enactment of the Consumer Protection Act in 1986 and establishes three-tier quasi-judicial system for redressal of consumer complaints. Key definitions include consumer, goods, services and complaint. The rights of consumers such as safety, choice, information, hearing and redressal are outlined. The responsibilities of consumers and importance of consumer protection for business organizations are also highlighted. Case studies within India and abroad are presented to illustrate how the law has been implemented.
The document discusses the need for consumer protection laws in India's free market system. It provides background on the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 and establishes consumer forums to address disputes. It defines key terms like consumer, goods, services, and complaint. The objectives of the Act are to protect consumers from exploitation and unfair trade practices. It outlines the rights of consumers such as safety, choice, information, redressal and education. The responsibilities of consumers are also mentioned.
This document provides guidance on obtaining valid consent and assessing mental capacity. It discusses the importance of ensuring patients understand procedures and risks before obtaining consent. It outlines key principles from the Mental Health Act and Mental Capacity Act, such as assessing capacity and determining best interests. The document also describes types of consent forms, roles like IMCA advocates, and powers like LPAs. It includes examples of how to quantify and qualify risks to patients. Finally, it provides answers to sample cases related to valid consent and mental capacity.
On Saturday, May 4, 2013, the Sino-American Biomedical & Pharmaceutical Professionals Association (SABPA) held its 8th Annual Biomedical Forum. The forum focused on career development, entrepreneurship and the latest innovations in pharma/biotech and medical devices industries. The biomedical forum strives to provide an attractive platform for entrepreneurs, scientists, engineers, investors, executives, and policy makers to promote life sciences, biotech, medical device and alliances across the biomedical industry in Southern California and Asian countries. Knobbe Martens Partner Terry Tullis presented on “Commercialization and Patent Infringement.”
The Consumer Protection Act 1986 was enacted to better protect the interests of consumers, protect consumer rights, and provide simple, speedy and inexpensive redressal to consumer disputes. The key rights established for consumers include the right to be protected against unfair trade practices, the right to be informed about product quality and pricing, the right to choice and competitive pricing, the right to be heard, and the right to seek redressal. The Act covers all goods and services across private, public and cooperative sectors. It defines key terms and establishes a three-tier quasi-judicial mechanism for consumer dispute redressal at the district, state and national levels.
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The Consumer Protection Act was enacted in 1986 and came into effect in 1987 to protect consumer interests and rights. It aims to provide better protection of consumer interests through the establishment of consumer councils and protection of consumer rights. The act defines key terms like consumer, complaint, unfair trade practices, and deficient services. It gives consumers the right to be protected from hazardous goods, the right to information about product quality, and the right to seek redressal against unfair trade practices through the appropriate forums.
1 BLOCK 1 TRIMESTER 1 2018 TLAW 101 – BUSINESS LAW – ASSI.docxhoney725342
1
BLOCK 1 TRIMESTER 1 2018: TLAW 101 – BUSINESS LAW – ASSIGNMENT QUESTIONS
Assessment Details
Due date: Friday, 6 April 2018 11-59 PM IN TURNITIN
Weighting: 30%
Length: 1500 words (+/- 10%), correctly referenced
Objectives
Answer the following questions with reference to the relevant common law and equity
principles operating in Australia concerning contracts plus related and other transactions. Do
not consider the effects of legislation potentially applicable other than that specifically
identified. Students may make whatever additional factual and/or legal assumptions are
necessary or convenient. And students must write about 1500 words (+/- 10%), or about 750
(+/- 10%) words per 15 mark allocation.
Assessment Task
Question 1 15 Marks
The University of Millennia called for tenders for supplies of green seed for its surrounds, with
a closing date of 1 June.
The following tenders were submitted:
• Greenland hand-delivered its tender on 29 May, which went into the tender box.
• Enviro posted its tender on 15 May. This letter was received by the University on 17 May,
but, by being submitted so early, one of the administrative assistants filed it with the
intention of later putting it in the box when she was properly organised.
• Plant Forever posted its tender on 30 May. This letter arrived on 2 June but nevertheless
was put into the tender box.
It transpired that only two of the tenders were considered by the relevant administrative
officials of the University. Although the tender by Enviro was the lowest and contained the
most attractive features, the administrative assistant forgot where she had filed it and did not
find it again until a week after the decision was made.
Greenland’s tender was the next lowest, but because of rumours about its unreliability, the
University awarded the contract to Plant Forever. The University posted a letter to Plant
Forever advising that its tender was successful. Unfortunately, this letter never reached Plant
Forever because it was destroyed by a disgruntled postal worker who had just been made
redundant. Since it had not heard from the University, Plant Forever instead committed its
full stock of seed to another contract with a regional council.
The University became aware of the full situation concerning the tender by Enviro and the
position in which Plant Forever now finds itself. It seeks advice concerning its contractual
position in relation to all three tenders.
2
Question 2 15 Marks
On 1 October Footloose Pty Ltd placed the following notice in the Daily News newspaper:
Special Shoes Special Discounts
Footloose Pty Ltd is awaiting the delivery of the latest summer collection shoes from Italy.
Styles include the new slingback sandals and wedge heels. Prices start at $2000 per hundred
pairs (ce ...
The document summarizes a conference and exhibition for National Landlord Day 2018 held on November 13th. It provides an agenda for breakout sessions on various landlord-related topics such as dispute resolution, landlord insurance, handling difficult tenant situations, and reducing costs for letting agents in implementing the letting agent code. The document encourages attendees to visit exhibitor stands during the lunch break and lists the locations for future breakout sessions after lunch resumes at 1:40pm.
Useful Information Ab. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Fields
The document provides instructions for requesting writing help from HelpWriting.net in 5 steps:
1. Create an account with a password and email.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline.
3. Choose a writer based on their bid, qualifications, and feedback.
4. Review the paper and authorize payment if satisfied.
5. Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a full refund option for plagiarism.
This document provides information about eligibility criteria, application processes, and funding opportunities for an innovation funding competition run by Innovate UK.
It outlines the eligibility requirements for organizations, projects, costs, and funding levels. Applicants must submit their applications through the Innovation Funding Service, which allows lead applicants to create accounts and invite collaborators. The document reviews the application questions, finances that can be claimed, and provides a worked example of funding calculations for a consortium project. It also provides brief information about using the Je-S system for collecting costs from academic partners.
John Rose and Kevin Caden are the managing director and director, respectively, of Iza Wealth, an independently owned South African financial advisory firm that offers holistic, objective offshore investment solutions. John has over 20 years of experience in healthcare, financial services, and wealth management. Kevin has 10 years of experience in asset management and financial regulation in Ireland and South Africa. Iza Wealth's team of advisors assists clients with offshore investment portfolios focused on foreign exchange, offshore investments, and retirement/estate planning. The document then discusses the potential effects of Brexit on South Africa and outlines four scenarios for how Brexit could impact trade between the UK and South Africa.
Similar to · Develop diagnoses for clients receiving psychotherapy· Analyz.docx (20)
· Present a discussion of what team is. What type(s) of team do .docxalinainglis
· Present a discussion of what team is. What type(s) of team do you have in your organization?
· What is meant by the “internal processes” of a team? Why is it important to manage both the internal processes and external opportunities/constraints of a team?
Note: It should contain 3 pages with citation included and References should be in APA format
.
· Presentation of your project. Prepare a PowerPoint with 8 slid.docxalinainglis
· Presentation of your project. Prepare a PowerPoint with 8 slides illustrating the role in Interdisciplinary care for our aging population (Outcome 1,2,3,4,5) (6 hours).
Make sure it has nursing diagnosis
make sure it's a APA STYLE
make sure it has reference
.
· Prepare a research proposal, mentioning a specific researchabl.docxalinainglis
· Prepare a research proposal, mentioning a specific researchable title, background, Review of literature, research questions and objectives, methodology, resources and references.
· Prepare the Gant Chart to indicate the timescale for completing the proposal
RESEARCH PROPOSAL OUTLINE
1. Title
2. Background (introduction)
3. Review of literature
4. Research Questions & objectives
5. Methodology
4.1 Research Design
4.2 Participants
4.3 Techniques
4.4 Ethical Considerations
6. Time scale (Gantt chart)
7. Resources
8. References
.
· Previous professional experiences that have had a profound.docxalinainglis
· Previous professional experiences that have had a profound effect:
Before I started college, my parents wanted me to excel in healthcare knowing its high demand. The path to health care and eventual employment in a notable hospital setting seemed less risky than the one of Art and design. A few networking events and some LinkedIn leads later I came across an opportunity to start a Biomedical Engineering startup in South Florida with two investors willing to mentor me in a field I wasn’t familiar with. Luckily this new venture I was undertaking had a somewhat speculative risk. I made sure they were mostly in my favor thanks to the connections my investors had in the industry, and my background in health care. My hard work and diligence paid off slowly teaching myself the mechanics of the industry through the engineers we would hire. I remember watching how they would calibrate medical devices from pumps to life-saving equipment in awe. And with the same tenacity absorbing all the medical jargon in the Biomed world. I was adamant about doing my best and being the best even if that meant leaving my creative dreams behind. We started the business almost four years ago as a small minority women-owned business in the corner of a business complex. Five biomedical engineers and six technicians later we are still scaling and have since expanded our office from that small corner to the entire business building. Currently, we are a nationally recognized Biomed and medical supply company for some of the largest healthcare facilities in both the civilian and government sector. Yet through out all the achievement I felt the only sense of raw passion was when I collaborated with my engineers in delivering problem solving services to the hospital we served. Their job was to service devices in a hospital at a micro level and I would bridge that gap by identifying problems and finding opportunities in product service at a large-scale. Working hand in hand with the engineers in articulating the hospital need for turnover I would use design through projective process in creating a plan that would work in the most practical sense.
This moment of free creative problem solving was the highlight of my job. It gave me an opportunity to realize that although at times my approach was unconventional it would work. My systematic methodology I had adapted from working with engineers and my innate out of the box idea would come to together to solve some of the most challenging issues. Little did I know that this minor stroke of self-awareness would one day have me consider architecture.
Your current strengths and weaknesses in reaching your goal.
I realized my creative talents in design could not flourish under the pressures of work. I would constantly leave the office feeling drained in a profession my heart was not set on. In this I learned my weakness was how far I was willing to neglect the urge for creativity, and in exchange it jeopardized my sense of purpos.
· Please select ONE of the following questions and write a 200-wor.docxalinainglis
· Please select ONE of the following questions and write a 200-word discussion.
1. The Federal Reserve Board has enormous power over people's lives with its power to set and influence policy that determines monetary policy in the United States. Do you think this is proper for a democracy to provide the FED with so such power? How is the FED held accountable?
2. Do you believe that the roles of government should change from era to era, or should the US determine the proper role of government and try to maintain it through the ages?
3. Explain Executive Power in the US Constitution and briefly the process by which it developed over the years. Do you think the Framers should have been more specific about the powers of the presidency? Should the country try to make it more specific today?
· Please read the discussions below and write a 100 to 150 words respond for each discussion.
1. (question 1) I do believe that this is proper for a democracy to provided such power to FED. Without the FED the economy would face two problem, which are recessions that can lead into depressions, and inflation. The FED needs to have power to endures the country will not fall into economic trouble. In class professor McWeeney stated that the FED has the power to increase interest rates to control inflation, and the power to decrease interest rates so that theres more money in the economy to create more business and jobs so there wont be a recession. The FED needs these power to try to put the economy in a sweet spot. The FED is held accountable to the government and public. The FED does this by being transparent and giving and annual report to congress.
2. (question 2) I believe that the roles of the government should be changed from era to era. My main reason the roles should be changed is because major changes are constantly happening in the field of law. For example, the progressive era and modern era had several economic reforms that had taken place including increased regulation, anti-trust activity, application of an income tax, raise on social insurance programs, etc. Throughout this time, the government gave women the right to vote. I believe the economy is growing rapidly due to employment relationships, better technology, education, new polices, social and economic changes. This is the reason why the roles of the government should be changed from era to era.
Communicating professionally and ethically is one of the
essential skill sets we can teach you at Strayer. The following
guidelines will ensure:
· Your writing is professional
· You avoid plagiarizing others, which is essential to writing ethically
· You give credit to others in your work
Visit Strayer’s Academic Integrity Center for more information.
Winter 2019
https://pslogin.strayer.edu/?dest=academic-support/academic-integrity-center
Strayer University Writing Standards 2
� Include page numbers.
� Use 1-inch margins.
� Use Arial, Courier, Times New Roman.
· Please use Firefox for access to cronometer.com16 ye.docxalinainglis
· Please use
Firefox
for access to
cronometer.com
16 years old Female. Born on 01/05/2005. Height 5’4, 115 lbs
· Menu Analysis
DAY 2
Quesadilla
Fiesta beans
Salsa
Sour cream
Corn
Fruit
· Submit Screen Shot for Nutrient report for assignment menu(s)
§ Right click to use “Take a screenshot” feature (Firefox only) on specific date you want to have screen shot to save/obtain.
Nutrient Report and Food Intake
· The paper must include all required elements including
each
Cronometer, Excess, Deficit, and
G
roup
Summary of your nutrient report and food intake
Excess
:
· List
ALL
Nutrients that are
Over 100% (Except Amino Acids)
on Cronometer Nutrient report
· List
Food Items
on menu that may reflect excess nutrients on Cronometer Nutrient report
Deficit
:
· List
ALL
Nutrients that are
Less than 50% (Except Amino Acids)
on Cronometer Nutrient report
· List
Food Items
on menu that may reflect deficit nutrients on Cronometer Nutrient report
Summary
:
§ Summarize your overall in 1-2 paragraph, evaluation and conclusion of nutrients and food items on the menu.
.
· Please share theoretical explanations based on social, cultural an.docxalinainglis
· Please share theoretical explanations based on social, cultural and environmental factors, which may contribute to victimization from criminal behavior
· Based on your personal or professional experience share your thoughts on what coping mechanism (internal and external), and support processes can be considered if becoming a crime victim?
.
· If we accept the fact that we may need to focus more on teaching.docxalinainglis
· If we accept the fact that we may need to focus more on teaching civic responsibility, how can this work with both "policies and people" in the school where you become principal?
In order to increase the focus on teaching civic responsibility, policy must be in place supporting this goal. A school leader must be willing to invest time and funds into planning, training, and implementing curriculum that emphasizes civics. Staff members may have different levels of interest, understanding, and comfort when it comes to incorporating civic responsibility into their teaching, so providing professional development in this area would be critical. The strategic plan for integrating civic responsibility and the expectations for each teacher’s involvement should be clearly communicated. In addition to establishing these policies regarding civics education, the school leader and teachers must work to model civic responsibility. In addition to sharing his or her vision for increased focus on civics with the school staff, the school leader should work to share his or her vision with school board members, other district personnel including the superintendent, and the greater community. Lastly, school leaders need to support their staff as they take risks and work to develop and implement new activities, discussions, and projects centered around teaching civic responsibility.
· How will you lead your staff in this part of the curriculum?
In leading my staff in this part of the curriculum, I would work to secure professional development related to civic responsibility, as this is not an area that I have expertise in, and work as a staff to develop our vision and implementation goals. I would also provide examples such as the work of the exemplar schools described in the article in integrating civic responsibility across all content areas, implementing service-learning programs, and creating partnerships between the school and community. I would also work within PLTs to develop ways that civic responsibility could be incorporated within their curriculum and remind them that they have my support as they embark on this endea
Required Resources
Text
Baack, D. (2017). Organizational behavior (2nd ed.). Retrieved from https://ashford.content.edu
· Chapter 8: Leadership
Articles
Austen, B. (2012, July 23). The story of Steve Jobs: An inspiration or a cautionary tale? (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.Wired. Retrieved fom http://www.wired.com/2012/07/ff_stevejobs/all/
Charan, R. (2006). Home Depot’s blueprint for culture change. Harvard Business Review. 84(4), 60-70. Retrieved from EBSCOhost database
Grow, B., Foust, D., Thornton, E., Farzad, R., McGregor, J., & Zegal, S. (2007). Out at home depot (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.. Business Week.
Retrieved from http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2007-01-14/out-at-home-depot
Stark, A. (1993). What's the matter with business ethics? Harvard Business Review, 71(3), 38-48. .
· How many employees are working for youtotal of 5 employees .docxalinainglis
· How many employees are working for you?
total of 5 employees
· How did you get your idea or concept for the business?
· CLEAR is a reflection by transparency, manifest and understood, our product is new in the market, and it follows the international fashion style that suits every lady,
· A bag represents you, bags are women priority, and its something women can't go outside without, our bags differ by other bags is that its clear, which is the new form of fashion style, we also made customization on bags so it is a remarkable tool that can lead to higher profit through increased customer satisfaction and loyalty, although it brings for our small factory a lot of work, the good work pays off, we entered these industry because there are no locals designer in it and we started in2016 and hope to reach a global position.
· What do you look for in an employee? (the most important things)
- helping customers on their choice
-stylist
- team work spirit
- deciplant & committed to work ethics
- Good Communication skills
- Ability to manage the conflict
- Is the company socially responsible?
Yes , we try our best to make some of sell go for the charity and especially to help poor people get new clothes , we donate 5% yearly in our total sales .
· What made you choose your current location?
Main criterias for selecting current location :
1- Close to the residence areas , meliha road, near the university of Sharjah
2- Easy access to the visiting customers
3- Its in a big avenue that has many designers and clothing brands
4- Easy to pick up from the shop
5- Serve a big segmentation
· What are your responsibilities as a business owner?
the main responsibility of the Business owner is to maintain the successful of the business, but in order to achieve this have to do so many tasks like:
1- Hire and manage the staff
2- Oversees the financial status , weekly and monthly .
3- Create marketing plans of how the business will be in a year
4- Update the website and chick the system
5- Rent fees
6- Make sure how customers are satisfied by the product
7- Make sure about product quality and chick up
8- Maintain a healthy work environment
9- Develop and fine tune the business according to the market situation
· How do you motivate your employees?
We follow different methods for motivations
1- Personal appreciation for individuals for hard work or personal achievements
2- Kind words
3- Flexible working hours
4- Daily bonus if achieved the daily sales targets
5- Giving the new collection bags as a gift before dropping it to the market , it makes them feel appreciated and special
· Can you give me an example of any challenges or problems that you faced with your shop and employees?
Hiring the right employee is always challenge, last Ramadan we had a huge unread massage for eid orders as well, our customer started to get angry and write under the inestgram comments that there was no respond for online shopping , we struggl.
· How should the risks be prioritized· Who should do the priori.docxalinainglis
· How should the risks be prioritized?
· Who should do the prioritization of the project risks?
· How should project risks be monitored and controlled?
· Who should develop risk responses and contingency plans?
· Who should own these responses and plans?
Introduction
This week, we will explore risk management. Risk management is one of those areas in project management that separates good project managers from great project managers. A good project manager makes risk management an integral part of every phase of project work. Risks are identified, prioritized, and understood. There are clear responsibilities within the team as to whose is responsible for implementing a risk response to reduce the impact should it occur. So let's get started.
What is Risk?
*Risk: An uncertain event or condition that, if it occurs, has a positive or negative effect on one or more project objectives.
Risks can be positive, meaning beneficial to the project, or they can be negative, meaning detrimental to the project.
Many students have a difficult time visualizing positive risks. A positive risk is an opportunity that may increase the probability of success, the return on investment, or the benefits of the project. They may also be ways to reduce project costs or ways to complete the project early. There may even be methods to improve project quality or overall performance. These are all examples of positive risks.
A negative risk can be easier to understand. It is the possibility that something will go wrong, a threat to the success of the project. It is important to remember that a risk is a possibility, not a fact. It is a potential problem. At GettaByte Software, there is the potential that a power outage would occur during data transfer. The potential exists that a key resource could become unavailable due to some unforeseen circumstance, like illness. Those are threats to the success of the project.
When buying a house to renovate, there are potential risks with respect to plumbing, wiring, the foundation, and so on.
A project manager needs to consider trying to make positive risks happen while trying to prevent negative ones from occurring. To do this, a project manager can take a proactive approach to risk management. This means he or she plans a risk response should it look as though the risk will become a reality. In this way, everyone knows exactly how to prepare and respond to the risk once it does become an issue.
The Risk Management Process
A project has both good and bad risks, which are referred to as positive and negative risks or opportunities and threats. For positive risks or opportunities, the project manager can choose from a range of risk responses. For threats, a project manager has a similar range of choices. The following, as described in the PMBOK® Guide, are the risk management processes.
Plan Risk Management:
· Risk Strategy
· Defines the general approach to managing risk on the project
· Methodology
· Defines the specific, tools, .
· How does the distribution mechanism control the issues address.docxalinainglis
· How does the distribution mechanism control the issues addressed in Music and TV, when in regards to race/ethnicity?
· Determine who controls the distribution of Music and TV, when in regards to race/ethnicity?
· In what ways does the controller of distribution affect the shared experience of the audience and community? Keep in mind that a community may be local, regional, national, or global. Be specific in your discussion.
.
· Helen Petrakis Identifying Data Helen Petrakis is a 5.docxalinainglis
·
Helen Petrakis Identifying Data: Helen Petrakis is a 52-year-old, Caucasian female of Greek descent living in a four-bedroom house in Tarpon Springs, FL. Her family consists of her husband, John (60), son, Alec (27), daughter, Dmitra (23), and daughter Althima (18). John and Helen have been married for 30 years. They married in the Greek Orthodox Church and attend services weekly.
Presenting Problem: Helen reports feeling overwhelmed and “blue.” She was referred by a close friend who thought Helen would benefit from having a person who would listen. Although she is uncomfortable talking about her life with a stranger, Helen says that she decided to come for therapy because she worries about burdening friends with her troubles. John has been expressing his displeasure with meals at home, as Helen has been cooking less often and brings home takeout. Helen thinks she is inadequate as a wife. She states that she feels defeated; she describes an incident in which her son, Alec, expressed disappointment in her because she could not provide him with clean laundry. Helen reports feeling overwhelmed by her responsibilities and believes she can’t handle being a wife, mother, and caretaker any longer.
Family Dynamics: Helen describes her marriage as typical of a traditional Greek family. John, the breadwinner in the family, is successful in the souvenir shop in town. Helen voices a great deal of pride in her children. Dmitra is described as smart, beautiful, and hardworking. Althima is described as adorable and reliable. Helen shops, cooks, and cleans for the family, and John sees to yard care and maintaining the family’s cars. Helen believes the children are too busy to be expected to help around the house, knowing that is her role as wife and mother. John and Helen choose not to take money from their children for any room or board. The Petrakis family holds strong family bonds within a large and supportive Greek community.
Helen is the primary caretaker for Magda (John’s 81-year-old widowed mother), who lives in an apartment 30 minutes away. Until recently, Magda was self-sufficient, coming for weekly family dinners and driving herself shopping and to church. Six months ago, she fell and broke her hip and was also recently diagnosed with early signs of dementia. Helen and John hired a reliable and trusted woman temporarily to check in on Magda a couple of days each week. Helen would go and see Magda on the other days, sometimes twice in one day, depending on Magda’s needs. Helen would go food shopping for Magda, clean her home, pay her bills, and keep track of Magda’s medications. Since Helen thought she was unable to continue caretaking for both Magda and her husband and kids, she wanted the helper to come in more often, but John said they could not afford it. The money they now pay to the helper is coming out of the couple’s vacation savings. Caring for Magda makes Helen think she is failing as a wife and mother because she no longer ha.
· Global O365 Tenant Settings relevant to SPO, and recommended.docxalinainglis
· Global O365 Tenant Settings relevant to SPO, and recommended settings
Multi Factor Authentication
Sign In Page customization
External Sharing
· Global SPO settings and recommended settings
Manage External Sharing
Site Creation Settings
· Information Architecture and Hub Site Management
Site Structure
Create and manage Hub Site
· Site Administration
Create Sites
Delete Sites
Restored Deleted Sites
Manage Site Admins
Manage Site creation
Manage Site Storage limits
Change Site Address
· Managed Metadata (Term Store)
Introduction
Setup new term group sets
Create and manage Terms
Assign roles and permission to Manage term sets
· Search
Search Content
Search Center
Crawl Site content
Remove Search results
Search Results
Manage Search Query
Manage Query Rules
Manage Query Suggestion
Manage result sources
Manage search dictionaries
· Security (identity – internal / external, and authorization – management of platform level)
Control Access of Unmanaged devices
Control Access of Network location
Authentication
Safeguarding Data
Sign out inactive users
· Governance – e.g. labels, retention, etc.
Data Classification
Create and Manage labels
· Data loss prevention
· Create and Manage security policies
· Devices Security policies
· App permission policies
· Data Governance
· Retention Policies
· Monitoring and alerting
Create and Manage Alerts
Alert Policies
· SharePoint Migration Tool
Overview
· Operational tasks for managing the health of the environment, alerting, etc.
File Activity report
Site usage report
Message Center
Service Health
· Common issue resolution and FAQ
.
· Focus on the identified client within your chosen case.· Analy.docxalinainglis
· Focus on the identified client within your chosen case.
· Analyze the case using a systems approach, taking into consideration both family and community systems.
· Complete and submit the “Dissecting a Theory and Its Application to a Case Study” worksheet based on your analysis
Helen Petrakis Identifying Data: Helen Petrakis is a 52-year-old, Caucasian female of Greek descent living in a four-bedroom house in Tarpon Springs, FL. Her family consists of her husband, John (60), son, Alec (27), daughter, Dmitra (23), and daughter Althima (18). John and Helen have been married for 30 years. They married in the Greek Orthodox Church and attend services weekly.
Presenting Problem: Helen reports feeling overwhelmed and “blue.” She was referred by a close friend who thought Helen would benefit from having a person who would listen. Although she is uncomfortable talking about her life with a stranger, Helen says that she decided to come for therapy because she worries about burdening friends with her troubles. John has been expressing his displeasure with meals at home, as Helen has been cooking less often and brings home takeout. Helen thinks she is inadequate as a wife. She states that she feels defeated; she describes an incident in which her son, Alec, expressed disappointment in her because she could not provide him with clean laundry. Helen reports feeling overwhelmed by her responsibilities and believes she can’t handle being a wife, mother, and caretaker any longer.
Family Dynamics: Helen describes her marriage as typical of a traditional Greek family. John, the breadwinner in the family, is successful in the souvenir shop in town. Helen voices a great deal of pride in her children. Dmitra is described as smart, beautiful, and hardworking. Althima is described as adorable and reliable. Helen shops, cooks, and cleans for the family, and John sees to yard care and maintaining the family’s cars. Helen believes the children are too busy to be expected to help around the house, knowing that is her role as wife and mother. John and Helen choose not to take money from their children for any room or board. The Petrakis family holds strong family bonds within a large and supportive Greek community.
Helen is the primary caretaker for Magda (John’s 81-year-old widowed mother), who lives in an apartment 30 minutes away. Until recently, Magda was self-sufficient, coming for weekly family dinners and driving herself shopping and to church. Six months ago, she fell and broke her hip and was also recently diagnosed with early signs of dementia. Helen and John hired a reliable and trusted woman temporarily to check in on Magda a couple of days each week. Helen would go and see Magda on the other days, sometimes twice in one day, depending on Magda’s needs. Helen would go food shopping for Magda, clean her home, pay her bills, and keep track of Magda’s medications. Since Helen thought she was unable to continue caretaking for both Magda and her husba.
· Find current events regarding any issues in public health .docxalinainglis
·
Find current events
regarding any issues in public health Anything about infectious diseases ( Don not pick one disease, you have you dig more infectious diseases)
· These current events can be articles, news reports, outbreaks, videos.
· Type down brief 2 sentences describing the event (don’t copy paste title)
· You should have
at least 7 diseases in
total
· No Malaria disease events, please
.
· Explore and assess different remote access solutions.Assig.docxalinainglis
· Explore and assess different remote access solutions.
Assignment Requirements
Discuss with your peers which of the two remote access solutions, virtual private networks (VPNs) or hypertext transport protocol secure (HTTPS), you will rate as the best. You need to make a choice between the two remote access solutions based on the following features:
· Identification, authentication, and authorization
· Cost, scalability, reliability, and interoperability
.
· FASB ASC & GARS Login credentials LinkUser ID AAA51628Pas.docxalinainglis
This document provides an overview and summary of the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) Codification of Governmental Accounting and Financial Reporting Standards.
The summary includes:
1) An explanation of the authoritative sources incorporated into the Codification including GASB statements, interpretations, and other pronouncements as well as NCGA and AICPA standards.
2) Details on the organization and structure of the Codification including its five parts addressing general principles, financial reporting, measurement, specific items, and specialized activities.
3) Guidance on using the Codification and on the authoritative status and hierarchy of GAAP for state and local governments.
4) Background information on the
· Due Sat. Sep. · Format Typed, double-spaced, sub.docxalinainglis
·
Due:
Sat. Sep.
·
Format
: Typed, double-spaced, submitted as a word-processing document.
12 point, text-weight font, 1-inch margins.
·
·
Length
: 850 - 1000 words (approx. 3-4 pages)
·
·
Overview
: In Unit 1 and Unit 2, we focused on ways that writers build ideas from personal memories and experiences into interesting narratives that convey significance and meaning to new audiences. In Unit 3, we have been discussing how writers invent ideas by interacting with other communities through firsthand observation and description. These relationships and discoveries can give writers insight into larger concepts or ideas that are valuable to specific communities. For this writing project, you will use firsthand observations and discoveries to write about people and the issues that are important to them. Your evidence will come from the details you observe as you investigate other people, places, and events.
Assignment
Write an ethnography essay focused on a particular group of people and the routines or practices that best reveal their unique significance as a group.
An ethnography is a written description of a particular cultural group or community. For the ethnography essay, you can follow the guidelines in the CEL, p. 110-112. Your ethnography should:
· Begin with your observations of a particular group. Plan to observe this group 2-3 times, so that you can get a better sense of their routines, habits, and practices.
o
Note: if you cannot travel to observe a group or community, plan to observe that community digitally through website documents, social media, and/or emails exchanged with group members.
· Convey insight into the characteristics that give the group unique significance.
· Provide context and background, including location, values, beliefs, histories, rituals, dialogue, and any other details that help convey the group's significance.
· Follow a deliberate organizational pattern that focuses on one or more insights about the group while also providing details and information about the group's culture and routine
As you look back over your observations and notes, remember that your essay should do more than simply relate details without any larger significance. Ethnographies also draw out the unique, interesting, and special qualities of a group or culture that help readers connect to their values or motivations. Note: Please keep in mind that writing in this class is public, and anything you write about may be shared with other students and instructors. Please only write about details that you are comfortable making public within our classroom community.
Assignment Components
In order to finish this project, we will work on the following parts together over the next few weeks:
Draft
: Include at least one pre-revised draft of your essay. The draft needs to meet the word count of 850 words and must also apply formatting requirements for the project—in other words it must be complete. Make sure that your.
· Expectations for Power Point Presentations in Units IV and V I.docxalinainglis
This document provides guidance for PowerPoint presentations in two units. It outlines 7 requirements for the presentations: 1) include a title slide, 2) include an overview slide after the title, 3) include a summary slide before the references, 4) cite sources on slides with information from readings, 5) do not use direct quotes, 6) include graphics, and 7) format references in APA style with matching in-text citations and reference list entries. It also notes that students can ask the instructor questions and should contact the instructor if they disagree with feedback.
· Due Friday by 1159pmResearch Paper--IssueTopic Ce.docxalinainglis
·
Due
Friday by 11:59pm
Research Paper--
Issue/Topic:
Celebrity, Celebrity Culture and the effects on society
1500 or more words
MLA format
Must include research from
at least 4
scholarly sources (use HCC Library and GoogleScholar) I have attached 20 pdf with scholarly sources to choose from. 2 were provided from teacher Celebrity Culture Beneficial and The Culture of Celebrity. I have also attached a Word Document Research Paper Guide. Please read all the way to bottom more instructions at the bottom. Disregards Links and external cites those are the PDFs.
Celebrity
is a
popular cultural Links to an external site.
phenomenon surrounding a well-known person. Though many
celebritiesLinks to an external site.
became famous as a result of their achievements or experiences, a person who obtains celebrity status does not necessarily need to have accomplished anything significant beyond being widely recognized by the public. Some celebrities use their
fameLinks to an external site.
to reach the upper levels of social status. Popular celebrities can wield significant influence over their fans and followers. Cultural historian and film critic Neal Gabler has described the phenomenon of celebrity as a process similar to performance art in which the celebrity builds intrigue and allure by presenting a manufactured image to the public. This image is reinforced through
advertisingLinks to an external site.
endorsements, appearances at high-profile events, tabloid gossip, and
social mediaLinks to an external site.
presence.
In previous decades, celebrity status was mainly reserved for film stars,
televisionLinks to an external site.
personalities,
entertainersLinks to an external site.
, politicians, and
athletesLinks to an external site.
. Contemporary celebrities come from diverse fields ranging from astrophysics to auto mechanics, or they may simply be famous for their lifestyle or
InternetLinks to an external site.
antics. Social media platforms such as YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram provide the means for previously unknown individuals to cultivate a significant following.
Celebrification
is the process by which someone or something previously considered ordinary obtains stardom. Previously commonplace activities, such as practicing
vegetarianismLinks to an external site.
or wearing white t-shirts, can undergo celebrification when associated with a famous person or major event.
Celebrity culture
exists when stardom becomes a pervasive part of the social order,
commodified
as a commercial brand. Celebrities’ personal lives are recast as products for consumption, with a dedicated fan base demanding information and unlimited access to the celebrity’s thoughts and activities. A niche community such as a fan base can be monetized through effective marketing that links brand loyalty to the consumer’s identity. Fans may be more likely to purchase a product or attend an event if they feel that doing so strengthens their.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
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Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
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How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Film vocab for eal 3 students: Australia the movie
· Develop diagnoses for clients receiving psychotherapy· Analyz.docx
1. · Develop diagnoses for clients receiving psychotherapy*
· Analyze legal and ethical implications of counseling clients
with psychiatric disorders*
Select a client whom you observed or counseled this week.
Then, address the following in your Practicum Journal:
· Describe the client (without violating HIPAA regulations) and
identify any pertinent history or medical information, including
prescribed medications.
· Using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Health
Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5), explain and justify your
diagnosis for this client.
· Explain any legal and/or ethical implications related to
counseling this client.
· Support your approach with evidence-based literature.
PATIENT DATA:
· Data:
Met with pt to complete biopsychosocial assessment.
Pt presents as a 23-year-old male, DOC is cocaine. Pt unsure of
the amount that he was using. Pt reports smoking crack 3-4
times per week and marijuana 3-4 times per week. Pt denies any
seizures, DT's, blackouts, or OD's. Pt reports that he has been
extremely bothered by cravings to use in the past month. Pt was
at CBH in December 2018. Pt reports that 3 weeks ago he had 2
months clean. Pt reports that his cousin struggles with substance
use and mental health issues. Pt denies SI, HI, and SH.
Pt reports dangerous behavior, including buying drugs in
dangerous areas. Pt reports that he is unemployed and that it is
due to substance use. Pt reports that he has no financial income.
Pt plans to return to sober living after treatment. Pt does not
have any children. Pt reports that he will not be impacts by
5. @Gaftaworld
Why English Law? (1)
It is what you have
agreed to!
It reflects what the
trade wants
Gafta Domicile Clause
Legal effect of Domicile Clause?
DOMICILE This contract shall be deemed to have been made in
England and to be performed in England, notwithstanding any
contrary provision,
and this contract shall be construed and take effect in
accordance with the laws of England. Except for the purpose of
enforcing any award made in
pursuance of the Arbitration Clause of this contract, the Courts
of England shall have exclusive jurisdiction to determine any
application for
ancillary relief, (save for obtaining security only for the claim
or counter-claim),the exercise of the powers of the Court in
relation to the arbitration
proceedings and any dispute other than a dispute which shall
fall within the jurisdiction of arbitrators or board of appeal of
the Association
pursuant to the Arbitration Clause of this contract. For the
purpose of any legal proceedings each party shall be deemed to
be ordinarily resident or
carrying on business at the offices of The Grain and Feed Trade
Association, (Gafta), England, and any party residing or
carrying on business in
Scotland shall be held to have prorogated jurisdiction against
himself to the English Courts or if in Northern Ireland to have
16. Seller
• Provides goods
• Goods conform with contract
• Puts goods on board ship
Buyer
• Arranges shipping/insurance
• Gives proper notice to seller (e.g. vessel,
port)= pre condition of contract. Failure: seller
under no obligation to perform
Legal title and risk pass on delivery to ship
‘all inclusive price’
Seller
• Makes shipping arrangements
• Delivers goods
• Ships goods
• Arranges insurance
Buyer
• Nominates port
• Takes delivery – meets cost of unloading/
import licences/ customs duties
• Pays for goods on receipt of shipping documents
Risk passes on delivery – legal title passes later
FOB – Free on Board CIF – Cost Insurance Freight
Basic Contractual Obligations
(Summary)
45. 73
RULES AND CODE OF CONDUCT FOR
SUPERINTENDENTS
• Intended for superintendents listed on the GAFTA Register
of Approved Superintendents.
• If Superintendents act contrary to the provision of these
Rules they may be subject to disciplinary action
• Primary business activities are in the profession of
inspection
• In accordance with the agreed contract terms
• “When a Superintendent issues reports and certificates…
they shall reflect the actual and true findings”
• Accreditation ISO 17020, certification ISO 9001 or GTAS
audited
74
RULES AND CODE OF CONDUCT FOR
SUPERINTENDENTS
forms.
Price negotiations possible. It puts you in a position of
46. strength.
goods will be shipped.
company acts as a deterrent to suppliers. It has a
psychological effect. It acts to prevent problems.
company counts.
settlement.
tation
to the product in importing countries.
75
RULES AND CODE OF CONDUCT FOR
SUPERINTENDENTS
loading or discharging “the eyes and ear
• All operations it carries out shall comply with the appropriate
rules and the contract terms
• According to GAFTA Sampling Rules 124
• Can be done during loading or during discharge
47. • Need for submitting samples for testing to a laboratory on the
Register of GAFTA approved Analysts
• LCI : load compartments to be empty, clean, without
unsuitable odors, free from residues and vermin
• 3 preceding cargoes carried as declared by master +
cleaning methodology.
76
RULES AND CODE OF CONDUCT FOR
SUPERINTENDENTS
• According to GAFTA weighing rules N° 123
– Method as per contract or as per customs of the port
– Establish the method of weighing + create & keep records
– Weighing operations at appropriate place and time
– Information needed
» Apparatus used
» Approval by the authorities
» Info concerning calibration & verification
• Usually issued by national authorities
• Alternatively by the superintendents on basis of testing
48. • Only to other superintendent on the GAFTA register
77
ACCEPTING INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENT
• It is the duty of the principal to give instructions in due time
and these
instructions must be clear and unambiguous, including
sufficient detail to
enable the superintendent to carry out and perform the
inspection in
accordance with the requirements of the contract and according
to the
expectations of the principal
• An instruction is a directional message describing the task that
is to be
performed.
• In due time
• “As usual”
78
ACCEPTING INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENT
49. • It is the superintendent’s function to act on his Clients /
Principals behalf, ensuring that the consignment is in sound
condition, sampled and weighed correctly, accurate reporting,
and if needed making reserves against the concerned parties
• The duty of a Superintendent is to look after the best interests
of the parties to a contract and to act with neutrality, honesty
and integrity at all times.
• To be the ears & eyes of the client
79
ACCEPTING INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENT
superintendent will acknowledge and confirm the order,
detailing the
scope of work
inspector and
for the lab
80
ACCEPTING INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENT
– buyer/seller/receiver and their
representatives
50. – any tolerances – (more or less / min or max)
– Including testing methods
l
81
ACCEPTING INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENT
Fumigation,…
tements you need to have on your certificate,
e.g. FFHC,
Free from, etc... Be aware that some of these statements require
analysis.
ice)
82
SOME ISSUES
51. • Free from : not in the sample
• “Substantially free” or “practically free” : Fit for purpose
• Free from dead insects….
Sound, Loyal and Merchantable :
Organoleptic/condition
• IFIA minimum testing requirments
• Animal origin : sanitary/veterinary certificate authorities
• Plant origin : see “fit for…”
isrepresentation or non-sense certificates
• E.g. fumigation certificates, certifying non fumigation
83
http://www.google.be/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&sour
ce=images&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CAcQjRw&url=http://
www.zazzle.com/not_fit_for_human_consumption_tee-
235828857982213166&ei=WQ0uVYiNLc2tuQTXgYHICw&bvm
=bv.90790515,d.c2E&psig=AFQjCNF_LTRQbY4t2uWbG5zWw
0CTixJhGg&ust=1429167764294358
84
http://www.google.be/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&sour
ce=images&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CAcQjRw&url=http://
www.de-
jaeger.be/?attachment_id=155&ei=gQwuVafqLMijugSQ2IDwA
53. misleading a party, who might receive them at a later time, is
made
and
testing (USDA/ISO…)
Supervision, Sampling and Analysis
GAFTA COURSE 23/04/2019
Chris Ranschaert
SGS Group Management SA, Agriculture, Food & Life
88
GAFTA CONTRACTS
sealed as
required by the Sampling rules 124.
contract goods in
accordance with the custom of the port or as contracted :
According to the
Weighing rules 123.
89
54. GAFTA CONTRACTS
requirements for
supervision and sampling at Ports of Loading and Discharge are
contained within
the standard GAFTA Sampling and Analysis clause, which
reads:
For ports of loading:
“SAMPLING, ANALYSIS AND CERTIFICATES OF
ANALYSIS-
• Terms and conditions of GAFTA Sampling Rules No.124, are
deemed to be
incorporated into this contract.
• Samples shall be taken at time and place of loading.
• The parties shall appoint superintendents, for the purposes of
supervision and sampling
of the goods, from the GAFTA Register of Superintendents.
• Unless otherwise agreed, analysts shall be appointed from the
GAFTA Register of
Analysts.”
90
GAFTA
“SAMPLING, ANALYSIS AND CERTIFICATES OF
55. ANALYSIS-
• Terms and conditions of GAFTA Sampling Rules No.124, are
deemed to be
incorporated into this contract.
• Samples shall be taken at the time of discharge on or before
removal from the
ship or quay, unless the parties agree that quality final at
loading applies, in
which event samples shall be taken at time and place of loading.
• The parties shall appoint superintendents, for the purposes of
supervision and
sampling of the goods, from the GAFTA Register of
Superintendents.
• Unless otherwise agreed, analysts shall be appointed from the
GAFTA
Register of Analysts.”
91
GAFTA 124 SAMPLING RULES
VERSION 01/09/2018
92
GAFTA SAMPLING
56. • Quality results basically from its growth, harvesting and, in
some cases, it’s
processing
– Protein, moisture, admixture, fiber content...
• Condition Is said to be determined by factors that affect it
during
transportation or storage
– Contamination by pesticides, weevils, (sea)water
93
GAFTA SAMPLING : 1 SCOPE
contracts)
Preparation of the goods
94
57. GAFTA SAMPLING : 1 SCOPE
fishmeal, rice,
related to GAFTA contracts in bulk, bags or containers.
95
GAFTA SAMPLING : 2 DEFINITIONS
consignment of maximum 1 kilo in weight, or if taken
mechanically, weight appropriate to the equipment.
GATE SAMPLE)”: Is the accumulation,
combined total, of all the increment samples.
bulk
sample sealed into up to al least 3 kilograms containers each, in
as many containers as required by the rules
“ANALYSIS SAMPLES”: Samples are reduced from the
contractual samples, by the laboratories, to quantities
appropriate
for analysis tests.
tins
with close fitting lids of bags, including PE, cotton or other
suitable types of construction, which are securely tiedNEW
58. 01/09/2018
96
GAFTA SAMPLING :
3 GENERAL TERMS
register
detailed instructions !!
sence of a superintendent
97
GAFTA SAMPLING : 4 METHOD OF DRAWING
• Mutually agreed
• Safety first
• Natural light or lightening
59. 98
GAFTA SAMPLING : 4 METHOD OF DRAWING
e and physically possible
Consignment size Tons 0-5000 5001-10,000
10,001 -
25,000 >25,000
Lot size Tons 500 1000 2500 5000
No. of increments per lot number min 20 min 30 min 40 min 50
Min bulk aggregate sample per lot Kilos 20 30 40 50
Max weight of increments Kilos 1 1 1 1
99
GAFTA SAMPLING : METHOD OF DRAWING
• Ship of 8000 MT
• 8 lots of 1000 MT
• Min 30 increments/lot of max 1 kg, but min 30 kg
• 8 x 30 kg (8 bulk aggregate samples) = 240 kg of samples
• Let’s say loading 400 MT/hour = 1 lot in 2,5 hour = 1
increment every 5 min
100
60. EXAMPLE 12000 MT
101
EXAMPLE 12000 MT
102
Example 12000 MMT
103
GAFTA SAMPLING : EXAMPLES
MT)
10,000 mt / 35,098 mt grain vessels,
FOB terms:
2,500 5,500 10,000 35,098 (excess <250mt)
bags of 3 kg
bags of 3 kg
are 3 kgs in 1 bag 2 bags of 3 kg 2 bags of 3 kg 7 bags
of 3 kg
bags of 3 kgs
61. 104
GAFTA SAMPLING
from any
possible contamination
105
GAFTA SAMPLING
http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.enasco.com/
prod/images/products/8C/B01514WAt.jpg&imgrefurl=http://ww
w.enasco.com/whirlpak/Sampling+Equipment/Solid_Dry+Sampl
ing/?&sort=za&page=1&usg=__AuZrEElpFtkPI3O-
yIgQ_C6knBA=&h=100&w=100&sz=2&hl=nl&start=9&tbnid=z
_pdKLQkP7wYSM:&tbnh=82&tbnw=82&prev=/images?q=samp
ling+equipment+SCOOP&um=1&hl=nl&lr=&sa=G&tbs=isch:1
&um=1&itbs=1
106
GAFTA SAMPLING
107
63. GAFTA SAMPLING : METHOD OF DRAWING
• Security and integrity of intermediate samples
• Division of bulk aggregate samples
• Reduction to the contractual sets
• Possibility to pre reduce (25 %)
• Sample containers shall be full
• Sealed
• Bulk at loading : moving stream – nearest practicle point
• Bulk at discharge : from the hold (safety !!) or nearest
practicle point
(moving stream)
http://www.google.be/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&sour
ce=images&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CAcQjRw&url=http://
www.wagtechprojects.com/products/Heavy-Duty-Boerner-
Divider-
.html&ei=AhcuVeWgH5KLuASsp4GoAg&bvm=bv.90790515,d.
c2E&psig=AFQjCNHQuhgeb7f45HGwhw7MGlNPpv1fhQ&ust=
1429170286987955
112
DIVIDING
113
DIVIDERS
64. DIVIDERS / SIEVES
114
GAFTA SAMPLING
115
GAFTA SAMPLING
shall be drawn uniformly, by a piercing
spear from the
top, middle and bottom of each bag : (if not possible by scoop –
from the
ends and middle of the bags in rotation)
<100 bags - sample 20 bags
<1000 bags – sample 50 bags
>1000 bags – sample 0,5 % or min 50
bags
116
GAFTA SAMPLING – ROAD & RAIL
65. • GRAINS : (wagons or vehicles) : increment samples
to be taken by spear from 3 sampling points from
each wagon or vehicle.
• FEEDINGSTUFF (wagons or vehicles) : increment
samples to be taken from moving stream at outlet
filling hopper by hand scoop
• Grain and feeding stuff increment samples by hand
scoop from moving stream at outlet wagons or
vehicles
117
GAFTA SAMPLING : 4 METHOD OF DRAWING
• At loading of vessel:
– at the nearest practicable point to the vessel
– Concurrently with the loading, from a moving stream
– From conveyor, ex-silo, ex-vehicle/truck: across the
whole moving stream
– If loading by grab: from the quay or barge, from the bulk,
excluding the run
• At discharge of vessel:
66. – From various parts of the hold in a fair proportion,
excluding the run. Not considered safest point !
– If not possible (or not safe) draw increment samples at
the nearest practicable point to the hold, preferably from
a moving stream
– By hand scoop or other mutual agreed equipment
http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.enasco.com/
prod/images/products/8C/B01514WAt.jpg&imgrefurl=http://ww
w.enasco.com/whirlpak/Sampling+Equipment/Solid_Dry+Sampl
ing/?&sort=za&page=1&usg=__AuZrEElpFtkPI3O-
yIgQ_C6knBA=&h=100&w=100&sz=2&hl=nl&start=9&tbnid=z
_pdKLQkP7wYSM:&tbnh=82&tbnw=82&prev=/images?q=samp
ling+equipment+SCOOP&um=1&hl=nl&lr=&sa=G&tbs=isch:1
&um=1&itbs=1
118
GAFTA SAMPLING
Sender....................................................................................
.................................................................
M.V........................................................................................
................................................................
From.......................................................................................
...............................................................
To...........................................................................................
...............................................................
Commodity..............................................................................
...............................................................
Bags/Bulk...............................................................................
...............................................................
68. GAFTA SAMPLING
ARBITRATION
ons
tons)
– One set for each 5000 tons
» Sample 1: Analysis
» Sample 2: Arbitration
» Sample 3: Spare
Each sample packed in appropriate and sufficiently strong
material that maintains the quality and condition of the sample
with consideration to the type of test / analysis to be performed
NEW
01/09/2018
120
GAFTA SAMPLING
7. STANDING IN PROVISIONS (several receivers on a hold)
INSTRUCTIONS
69. • Reduction of samples at origin
• Within 14 consecutive day’s
• If failed : any claim, rejection : deemed to be waived and
barred.
. RETENTION OF SAMPLES
• 3 months (GMP+ = 6 months !)
121
GAFTA SAMPLING SECTION 2 : ANALYSIS
• Reduced from the contractual samples
• Certificates
• Notices clause
• Non compliance with the rules
122
WHEAT
http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.khalilpakist
71. Total error
Sampling error Analytical error
Sample
preparation
Sampling
preparation
error
126
GAFTA SAMPLING DIFFICULTIES
127
GAFTA SAMPLING RULES : 2018
IONS SHALL BE GIVEN TO THE
SUPERINTENDENTS TO TAKE ADDITIONAL SAMPLES
stuffs and
/ or grain, Corn = 10 kg
72. NEW
01/09/2018
128
DIFFERENT KIND OF VARIABLES
uous variables
• Continuous variable e.g. protein, moisture, oil content,…
– Each kernel has a certain value
– Normal distribution – Gauss
– 2 (-1 +1) sigma : 68 %
– 4 (-2 +2) sigma : 95 %
– 6 (-3 +3) sigma : 99 %
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8c/Standard_
deviation_diagram.svg
129
EXAMPLE : CONTINEOUS VARIABLES
• 68 % between 41.255 and 43.495
• 95 % between 40.135 and 44.615
79. 134
IMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT SAMPLING
• Perform correct, representative sampling, with high amount of
increments and use a boerner or riffle divider for sample
division
to make the composites.
• Don’t go for anything less than GAFTA rules !
• Lab portion for homogenization as high as practically
possible,
should never be less than ca. 500 g, preferably 1 kg or more
135
SAMPLING & CERTIFICATES
sealed as
required by the Sampling rules 124.
performed at
regular intervals throughout entire loading/discharging at the
80. nearest
practicable point of the vessel (as applicable) as per GAFTA
124
sampling rules. One composite sample of the total consignment
proportionally mixed was submitted for analysis in a reputable
laboratory
and we report the average actual result as follows: XXX”
136
SAMPLING & CERTIFICATES
• Not representative sampling
• Also for packed goods
• GAFTA Sampling Rules : taken at the time and place of
loading
GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
VERSION 2010
London 23/04/2019
Chris Ranschaert
SGS Group Management SA – Agriculture, Food & Life –
138
WEIGHING – WHY WEIGH ?
81. • The value of a consignment in bulk is determined by its
grade and weight.
• Payment of material costs depend directly on the results
obtained,
• Weight is to be determined by weighing upon scales that
are known to be accurate within the limits of tolerance
stated in scale specifications
• Weighing tolerances must be in accordance with the legal
requirements for accuracy of commercial weigh scales.
• All weighing differences should be within acceptable
tolerances.
139
WEIGHT CONTROL : ASCERTAINMENT OF WEIGHT
national standard can be used. Owners of such scales are
responsible for ensuring that periodical calibrations are
performed by a competent person and they must be in
possession of the stamped and signed calibration certificates.
For simplicity:
82. <0.05%
must be <0.1%
brated at least every two
years or when necessary as per local rules. Many country
calibrations are valid for one year.
140
WEIGHT CONTROL
– weighbridge or mechanical automatic
hopper scales.
• Prior to the commencement of loading and/or discharge, the
weighing equipment should be balanced and/or zeroed when
empty .
-Automatic weighing machines
• Weighbridge- Road vehicles
• Weighbridge – Rail wagons
• Non-continuous automatic weighing.
– Within this classification are many bulk weighing machines
which in
turn are classified as either non-continuous weighing such as
mechanical electronic hopper machines in Silos
• Continuous automatic weighing machines
83. – Equipment which requires no human intervention., or
continuous
weighing machines such as continuously totalizing conveyor
weighers (Belt weighers)
141
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
ing the terms and conditions of
the Grain
& Feed Trade Association (GAFTA), unless mutually agreed
otherwise.
142
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
• Dock authorities
• Public sworn weighers / superintendents
• Recognized weighers by local public
• Customs of the port
84. weighing
equipment in a secure route.
143
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
an allowance
mutually agreed
disposal
• checks not be able to be made, or denied,
• found to be at fault
• parties to the contract are to mutually agree upon the
loaded/discharged
weight.
• arbitration
144
85. WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
AUTOMATIC
HOPPER SCALES)
• Weighing equipment should be balanced and/or zeroed when
empty
• The right to secure the weighing equipment
• Static checks, where appropriate, to be performed
• Checking on a 2e scale with same commodity
145
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
146
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
147
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
Hopper scale
Train unit
Load cells
86. 148
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
INSTRUMENTS
(BELT WEIGHERS)
weighing.
the continuous flow can be
accurately recorded.
certificate.
149
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
150
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
ethods of
establishing weights
87. purposes, unless both parties to the
contract explicitly accept this method in
writing
151
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
basis of an analysis made
of the
samples of the damaged and undamaged part of the goods.
152
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
- ROAD VEHICLES & RAIL
WAGONS
zeroed when empty
weighed gross and tare.
88. -axle weighing will not be
accepted.
153
WEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULES
154
WEIGHT CONTROL
relevant in the case of bulk grain and or oil seed shipments .
• These could be errors or inaccuracy of measurement during
draft
surveys, on weighbridges, or in silo weightings.
• These include loss due to spillage or dust, plus any loss of
moisture content in the cargo, which could be affected by delays
in the voyage, high or low ambient air or sea temperature and
differing relative humidity's..
89. • Loss of weight in bulk grains may occur by the simple process
of
evaporation or drying out and respiration This is due to the
inherent nature of grain.
155
WEIGHT CONTROL
OF WEIGHT LOSSES
• 1. Normal "in service" inaccuracy of loading/discharging
scales.
• 2. Natural loss of cargo due to variation of moisture, heat
transfer, inherent nature of the cargo
• 3. Real losses of grain between silo and vessel at loading,
and between vessel and silo scale at discharge, i.e.
sweepings/dockage, and -including "Shrinkage".
156
THE CUSTOMARY TRADE LOSS
• Must be accurate as practical within acceptable confidence
limits.
• Due to complexities in accurate measurement differences of
0.5% are regularly termed the “Customary Trade Loss” or
90. ”Shrinkage Allowance” in grain as well other bulk cargoes.
• Apparent Loss. Due inaccuracies in scales/draft survey
• Real Losses. Due handling losses, spillage or dust,
moisture loss.
• A third form of loss, not recognized, could include the
manipulation of scales, figures or calibrations.
tiy shipments should be
under the ”Customary Trade Loss’ of 0.5%
157
LOSS ?
158
WEIGHT SHORTAGES : POSSIBLE CONTRIBUTING
FACTORS
SHORTAGES
Scale
calibrationMethods
Lack of
EquipmentPeople
Bad handling of
91. transportation
Natural
Losses and
Real losses
Length of
Chain
SecurityNon Ethical
Players
Weather conditions
Improper calibration
Dynamic to static effects
‘Unknown’ technical issues
External factors
Frequency of calibration
Cost of security
Lack of focus on security
Lack of coordination
with port authorities
Silo /Plant operation and lack
of security in silo / plant areas
Weigh (filtered dust)
92. Non-standardization of
D/S method or lack of
implemenation
Scales to D/S
differences
Absence of implementation
of standardized working
procedures
Geography
Number of origins
Simultaneous loading
Laptop, hydrometer,
water paste, tapes
External documents
(barge, vessel data)
Cargo
Handling
Equipment
Moisture
Training
Cost
Expertise
96. Sale of Goods ActRefreshments�Gafta Contracts: An
introduction�Slide Number 41Slide Number 42Slide Number
43Slide Number 44Slide Number 45Slide Number 46Slide
Number 47Slide Number 48Slide Number
49Lunch�Responsibility and risk� ��What do we mean by
Risk and Responsibility?Categories of RiskWhat is a
Contract?FOBFOB BuyerFOB SellerCIFFOBCIFRisk in the
GoodsRisk in the GoodsShipment RisksShipment
RisksDocumentary RisksDocumentary RisksDocumentary
RisksLegal & Political RisksExecution RisksMarket
RisksInstruction for Supervision�ISSUING INSTRUCTIONS :
Ensuring clarity and best practice���RULES AND CODE OF
CONDUCT FOR SUPERINTENDENTSRULES AND CODE OF
CONDUCT FOR SUPERINTENDENTSRULES AND CODE OF
CONDUCT FOR SUPERINTENDENTSRULES AND CODE OF
CONDUCT FOR SUPERINTENDENTSACCEPTING
INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENTACCEPTING
INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENT�ACCEPTING
INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENTACCEPTING
INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENTACCEPTING
INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE CLIENTSOME ISSUESSlide
Number 83Slide Number 84CERTIFICATES : HOT
TOPICSCERTIFICATES : HOT TOPICSSlide Number
87GAFTA CONTRACTSGAFTA CONTRACTSGAFTAGAFTA
124 SAMPLING RULESGAFTA SAMPLINGGAFTA
SAMPLING : 1 SCOPEGAFTA SAMPLING : 1 SCOPEGAFTA
SAMPLING : 2 DEFINITIONSGAFTA SAMPLING : 3
GENERAL TERMSGAFTA SAMPLING : 4 METHOD OF
DRAWINGGAFTA SAMPLING : 4 METHOD OF
DRAWINGGAFTA SAMPLING : METHOD OF
DRAWINGEXAMPLE 12000 MTEXAMPLE 12000 MTExample
12000 MMTGAFTA SAMPLING : EXAMPLESGAFTA
SAMPLINGGAFTA SAMPLINGGAFTA SAMPLINGGAFTA
SAMPLINGGAFTA SAMPLINGSAMPLINGAUTOMATIC
SAMPLERGAFTA SAMPLING : METHOD OF DRAWING
DIVIDINGSlide Number 113GAFTA SAMPLINGGAFTA
97. SAMPLINGGAFTA SAMPLING – ROAD & RAILGAFTA
SAMPLING : 4 METHOD OF DRAWINGGAFTA
SAMPLINGGAFTA SAMPLINGGAFTA SAMPLINGGAFTA
SAMPLING SECTION 2 :
ANALYSISWHEATWHEATWHEATUNCERTAINTYGAFTA
SAMPLING DIFFICULTIESGAFTA SAMPLING RULES :
2018DIFFERENT KIND OF VARIABLESEXAMPLE :
CONTINEOUS VARIABLESAN EXAMPLEEXAMPLE :
DISCONTINEOUS VARIABLESAN EXAMPLESAMPLING
FOR MYCOTOXINSIMPORTANT FACTS ABOUT
SAMPLINGSAMPLING & CERTIFICATESSAMPLING &
CERTIFICATESGAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULESWEIGHING –
WHY WEIGH ?WEIGHT CONTROL : ASCERTAINMENT OF
WEIGHT��WEIGHT CONTROL�WEIGHT CONTROL :
GAFTA 123 WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA
123 WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROL : GAFTA 123
WEIGHING RULESWEIGHT CONTROLWEIGHT
CONTROLTHE CUSTOMARY TRADE LOSS�LOSS
?WEIGHT SHORTAGES : POSSIBLE CONTRIBUTING
FACTORSSlide Number 159Break�Sampling Exercise &
Feedback�Evening networkingSummary�
Gafta GPD
Trade Foundation Course
23rd – 26th April 2019
106. Finances the operation
Usually draft and confirm contract
Helps negotiate charterparty terms
Drafts charterparty or contract
Cargo side: CAD, L/C, prepayment, performance bond etc
Insurer
Usually via a broker
Either:
CIF: Marine and storage policy
FOB/C&F: Sellers interest policy
Operators/Execution
Freight: Operators
108. Issue warehouse receipt
Check quantity through SMA (stock monitoring agreement) or
CMA (collateral management agreement)
May operate cranes if required
In port or where goods handling is needed
Carry out sampling
Ascertain weight, quality & condition
Issue certificates
Vessel master
Usually First officer or First Mate
Supervises whole loading operation
Issues Mate’s receipts (before B/L)
Laboratory
109. Runs analysis of samples against contract specifications
Other service providers
Fumigation
Execution staff
Check certificates
Bank
Check documents against L/C
Phytosanitary sampling analysis
Certification of origin
Issue certificates of above
1st tier issues
Cargo underwriters
110. Average adjusters
P&I
2nd tier issues
Legal services
Mediation
Arbitration
Transactional process in the shipping of goods.
From negotiation and loading through to discharge at
destination.
The example attached in the following slides includes reference
to the physical contract for the goods, the associated
charterparty to transport the goods and then payment for the
goods under a letter of credit.
With the example used there are in fact three specific
contracts which make up the transaction.
The first is the Physical Contract for the goods.
The second is the Contract governing transport, in this case the
Contract of Carriage (Charterparty).
And the third is the contract and obligations surrounding the
payment terms associated with a Documentary Letter of Credit
(L/C).