Answer:
So organisations make commitments to major projects, but cannot always deliver what was expected and, more worryingly, cannot determine how much value they are getting from their investment. ... Poorly defined project scope. Inadequate risk management. Failure to identify key assumptions.
Explanation:
Answer:
d) All of the above
Explanation:
Quarrying is the commercial extraction of building raw material, stones and marbles. It can become a major environmental concern due to the following reasons:
1) Fine dust particles which spread in the air around a quarrying site causes air pollution and respiratory problems.
2) It produces noise pollution because of the heavy machinery and the blasts to break huge chunks of rocks.
3) Blasting often generates vibration which may damage the nearby buildings or similar structures.
4) Destroys the natural vegetation and ruins the natural habitats for plants and animals.
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False; they also protect internal organs
The answer is "behaviorism perspective of development."
Behaviorism is the hypothetical point of view in which learning and conduct are portrayed and clarified as in terms of stimulus-response connections. Behaviorism can be educated or molded and there are two kinds of conditioning; Classical and operant conditioning.
Researching with human participants (independently of their particularities, such as those mentioned) is regulated by the U.S. Federal regulations named “Common Rule Layout,” federally funded research using humans also need review by an IRB of the institution conducting the research.
They establish in chapter III “Standards and guidance for members of the research ethics committees, incise 3: “Selection of study population and recruitment of research participants Ethically acceptable research ensures that no group or class of persons bears more than its fair share of the burdens of participation in research. Similarly, no group should be deprived of its fair share of the benefits of research; these benefits include the direct benefits of participation (if any) as well as the new knowledge that the research is designed to yield. Thus, one question for research ethics review to consider is whether the population that will bear the risks of participating in the research is likely to benefit from the knowledge derived from the research. Also, ethically acceptable research includes recruitment strategies that are balanced and objectively describe the purpose of the research, the risks and potential benefits of participating in the research, and other relevant details” (p.13)
The document: “Preg45CFR 46, Subpart B: Additional Protections for Pregnant Women, Human Fetuses and Neonates Involved in Research”, indeed specifies in detail those requirements also necessary to research with these groups. If determined research reviewed by the IRB as previously mentioned (even when women, minors, persons kept in detention and unborn fetuses are all considered vulnerable research participants) meet the requirements for the research, as specified elsewhere.
Therefore, the correct answer is A) the research can be authorized if the requirements for subpart b, additional protections for pregnant women, human fetuses and neonates involved in research are met because subpart b takes precedence over subpart d. The requirements of subparts a, b, c, and d are met.