Category: Social science

  • “Choosing Occupational Exposure Limits: Balancing Legal Compliance and Worker Safety”

    Please respond to lammario. with. 170. word s
    As a safety officer responsible for ensuring the well-being of employees in a facility, choosing which occupational exposure limits to use is a critical decision. The primary occupational exposure limits available are OSHA’s permissible exposure limits, the ACGIH’s threshold limit values, and NIOSH’s recommended exposure limits. Each of these standards has unique attributes that may influence the decision on which to use.
    Using OSHA’s permissible exposure limits exclusively has several advantages, primarily revolving around legal compliance. OSHA’s permissible exposure limits are legally enforceable, and adhering strictly to these ensures compliance with federal regulations, thereby avoiding legal penalties and ensuring that the facility meets minimum safety standards (OSHA, 2021). Facilities are subject to inspections by OSHA, and failure to meet the permissible exposure limits can result in fines and other penalties. Ensuring adherence to these limits protects the facility from such repercussions. Additionally, OSHA permissible exposure limits provide clear and standardized guidelines that are straightforward to implement, simplifying training and enforcement processes within the facility (OSHA, 2021).
    However, using ACGIH’s threshold limit values, NIOSH’s recommended exposure limits, or a combination of these with OSHA’s permissible exposure limits offers additional benefits, particularly from a health and safety perspective. Threshold limit values and recommended exposure limits are often based on more recent scientific research and can provide more stringent protection for workers’ health. ACGIH and NIOSH continuously update their guidelines based on the latest toxicological and epidemiological data (ACGIH, 2021). This scientific rigor ensures that workers are protected against both acute and chronic health effects, whereas some OSHA’s permissible exposure limits may be outdated and not as protective (Michaels, 2012). More stringent occupational exposure limits can also offer better protection for sensitive workers, including those with pre-existing health conditions or higher susceptibility to certain chemicals.
    Adopting the most protective standards demonstrates a commitment to worker safety and health, which can enhance the company’s reputation and foster a culture of safety within the workplace (Thorne, 2000). Many industries consider threshold limit values and recommended exposure limits as best practices, and aligning with these can ensure that the facility remains competitive and adheres to high safety standards recognized within the industry. Using a combination of occupational

  • “The Power of Telecommunications: Examining its Impact on Society and Political Control” “Telecommunications Technology and Political Manipulation: The History and Impact of Data Mining and Privacy Concerns” “Data Colonialism and Corporate Dominance in Telecommunications: A Critical Analysis of Team X and Team Y’s Arguments” “The Impact of Technological Revolutions on Social Stratification: A Critical Analysis of Tolstoy’s Thesis”

    “If the arrangement of society is bad (as ours is), and a small number of people have power over the majority and oppress it, every victory over Nature will inevitably serve only to increase that power and that oppression.”
    — Count Leo Tolstoy
    Working in teams of two-to-four students, you will explore the impact of the following technological revolutions over the past two centuries, gathering evidence and constructing arguments to affirm or refute Tolstoy’s assertion that technological revolutions are inevitably used by the wealthy and powerful to enhance their leverage over the rest of society:
    Telecommunications
    Two teams (Team X & Team Y) will research and analyze the social, political, and cultural impact of each of these technological revolutions and post a 3–5-minute presentation by 9am on June 13th, in which each group will present its analysis.
    Team X will gather evidence supporting the argument that this technological revolution has actually increased the power of ordinary people, thus refuting Tolstoy’s thesis.
    Team Y will gather evidence supporting the argument that it has only increased the power of those at the top, thus affirming Tolstoy’s thesis. 
    On June 13th, after hearing both presentations on each technological revolution, the class will vote via secret ballot on which presentation made the most compelling argument, supported by the most convincing evidence. 
    Team Y presentation info: 
    Background info:
    Telecommunications involve a transmitter and receiver, and is the exchange of information over long distances
    Mediums: original medium was voice, but now typically internet, telephones, radio, televisions
    https://www.mitel.com/articles/what-is-telecommunications#:~:text=Telecommunications%2C%20also%20known%20as%20telecom,%2C%20light%2C%20cable%2C%20etc.
    Political aspects/supporting information:
    Lobbying: major telecommunication giants spend money lobbying for specific legislation and regulations, which benefits those at the top at the expense of others
    Examples: “From 1998 to 2018, telecommunications companies including AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Charter and others have dumped more than $1.2 billion into the pockets of Congress in attempts to win favor with lawmakers. Figures compiledby Comparitech found that America’s largest phone and internet providers show that recent years have only seen lobbying costs increase. 2018 was the highest individual year for telecom lobbying, with $80 million being spent by ISPs—and it’s only expected to continue increasing.”
    “The Trump administration’s FCC has since overturned the rulesthat protected net neutrality—a concept that prevented ISPs from blocking, censoring or slowing the flow of data online.  Telecom giants also scored a victory when lawmakers voted to reverse an FCC rule that prevented ISPs from selling consumer data without explicit permission.”
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/ajdellinger/2019/05/31/heres-how-telecom-giants-spent-more-than-1-billion-lobbying-congress/
    Control over the media/info: telecommunications giants control the media, as well as politicians who use social media and have gained millions of followers which influence political discourse and public opinion
    Examples: “Social media influencers have a more extreme effect on the rest of society, according to the researchers. As more people turn to social media for their news, influencers and traditional media outlets begin competing for the same audiences. To stand out from the crowd and attract more followers, influencers distort their messaging. In response, the opinions of citizens who are swayed by the influencers become more polarized.”
    https://www.psu.edu/news/research/story/social-media-influencers-may-affect-more-voter-opinions/
    Privacy/surveilance: personal data collected and used by the government and policymakers
    Examples: “Government policymakers, program administrators, and staff use data and data analyses for multiple purposes, including description and analysis (e.g., of conditions, impacts, costs, supply and demand trends), diagnoses, predictions, and prescriptions.”
    https://www.urban.org/research/publication/government-decisions-and-issues-about-collecting-and-using-data
    General Info About  Technology: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160791X96000309#aep-abstract-id3
    “Major new technologies, while creating a new universe of opportuntities, have at the same time raised concerns about future directions of a society. This is very muhc the case today with telecommunications… the powerful synergy of telecommunications and information processing”(405)
    – Telecommunications technology began with telegraphs, then moved into radio and, later, telephones”(408)
    “With telecommunications, national borders and thus, sovereignty, are penetrated in many virtually unstoppable ways: by economic and political information, culturally, diplomatically by stock and other electronic trading exchanges; by international telemedicine… by online servies; by software”(408)
    History of Cambridge Analytica Scandal
    https://bipartisanpolicy.org/blog/cambridge-analytica-controversy/
    Data mining and ethics of data privacy
    “distant 3rd parties to monopolize on the data being disseminated and use it to manipulate and influence content on a user’s Facebook feed”
    This helped affiliated parties influence people
    https://www.theverge.com/2018/3/19/17141266/facebook-cambridge-analytica-user-data-donald-trump-campaign-2016-election
    Aleksandr Kogan obtained the data which allowed him to determine what advertisements influence people’s behaviors. He then gave this info away to Cambridge Analytica, a company that provides data-driven services to political campaigns
    They used this data to better target people who could be easily influences with political messages called microtargeting
    This data is provided to the application programming interface tool through the Facebook user’s consent, however, nobody consented to being micro targeted and having their own data be used against them for a political parties gain; its corrupt and shady; afterwards, Zuckerberg even stated how they would 
    Created the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act in the European Union
    Lead to Twitter banning all political ads, Google limiting political ads, Facebook lets ppl opt out of political ads now 
    https://bipartisanpolicy.org/blog/cambridge-analytica-controversy/
    Political Speech:
    Telecommunications is the exchange of information over long distances. Mediums for telecommunication are telephones, radios, telegraph, and the internet. With the introduction of telecommunication, politics did improve with the ability to transmit information faster, leading to being able to solve crises sooner which proved helpful in wars. However, it’s no surprise that Tolstoy’s claim still stands to be true in the way that the affluent minority will ultimately use this technology to increase their own standing by oppressing others. For example, German propaganda during WWII was easy to dissipate due to radio broadcasting eleven hours a day, focusing solely on disproving pro-British sentiments. Joseph Goebbels, German propaganda minister, called the radio the “eighth great power”, noting the influence of radio in promoting the Third Reich, thus maintaining the Nazi’s control. Even with the telegraph, there were concerns about the spread of misinformation as one writer on the Philadelphia Morning Pennsylvanian Newspaper stated how “great the potential for corruption of the telegraph is in the hands of the elite”. 
    Furthermore, with advancements of the internet, this corruption has only gotten more extreme. Expert in internet government Esther Mwema and cognitive scientist Abeba Birhane explain how the undersea internet cable projects are owned, controlled, and managed by private Western Big Tech which follow the same infrastructural path laid during the trans-Atlantic slave trade. They begin to touch on how the same slave trade route that imparted colonialism in the past with the shipment of enslaved people is now being used for data colonialism in the future which will still disproportionately benefit the small but affluent citizens of our society. According to Birhane and Mwema, these cables will be controlled by US companies, making America “the primary custodian of the internet”. It was just in 2023 that the Biden administration was in discussion with SubCom, a company that designs and implements undersea fiber optic cable networks, to build more subsea internet cables controlled by US companies to make the US have more control over the Internet. Google even agreed with SubCom to build the world’s largest-ever private data network, reinforcing data harvesting which has been shown to lead to the corrupt practice of microtargeting, which targets people who could be easily influenced with certain messaging. This was seen during the Cambridge Analytica Scandal where politically affiliated third parties began to monopolize data to manipulate and influence content on a user’s facebook feed. Despite telecommunications being able to connect people across vast distances, and attempting to keep the public informed, it has been and will always be at a cost, a cost only benefitting the wealthiest in our society who overshadow all the good aspects of telecommunications with the negative ones by spreading misinformation and using the data of the people they claim to support for their own greedy aspirations. 
    Social aspects/supporting information:
    Corporate dominance: AT&T and Verizon remain two of the largest telecommunications companies that control the delivery of service for over 100 million US consumers, thus keeping themselves in power and putting smaller companies and shareholders out of business
    They first bought out Dobson Cellular in 2007, which primarily provided cellular service to those in rural areas, then in 2008 bought out Centennial and Wayport, both of which were significant providers. Wayport provided the majority of US internet hotspots, and through this transaction AT&T controlled over 20,000 hotspots in the US and became the country’s number one provider. Then, they purchased qualcom spectrum to increase their 4G service. In 2014, it acquired Leap, or cricket, and acquired its 5.3 million subscribers. By continuing to purchase smaller corporations and expand their company, they are proving Tolstoy’s thesis by dominating the telemarketing industry and by overtaking smaller competitors.
    Social influence/ public opinion: Social media algorithms, controlled by telecommunications and tech giants, influence what information people see. This control over information flow can shape public opinion, often in ways that benefit those in power
    The global greens powder market was worth $335.7 million in 2023 and is anticipated to reach $718.49 million by 2032, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.52 percent. Bloom nutrition acquired $90 million of that through their social media marketing. They became a dominant greens powder brand through promoting their product through paying social media influencers to discuss it on their platforms. This caused them to increase substantially very quickly, as the company began in 2019. The influence social media stars have on consumers is used to corporations benefits to gain more power and consumers, as well as to remain a top corporation.
    Above are all the information for you to have a understanding of what is this assignment and the essay I’m gonna write about.(don’t use any of the sources above as a detail evidence because it was in presentation already) I’m in Team Y and below are the details that should be include in my essay. (Important ps. In this essay at least include 3 print sources that you can discovered in Boston University Mugar library: https://www.bu.edu/library/) 
    On June 25th, each student will submit a personal reflection in which they survey the specific arguments presented by Team X and Team Y followed by your personal assessment of Tolstoy’s claim that technological revolutions tend to increase and entrench social stratification. This paper should be 1000 to 1250 words in length and contain the following elements: 1) An introduction outlining how you thought about your assigned technology before starting our social science course, 2) A brief narrative of your work on the June 13th presentation, critiquing at least three print sources that you discovered in the stacks at Mugar on this technology, and 3) a conclusion in which you explain your own position on Tolstoy’s thesis about technology. In this final section, you should discuss how your position on technological revolutions has been informed not only by your research, but also by your personal experience. All sources should be cited with Chicago Style footnotes and a complete bibliography. 

  • Title: Interview Protocol for a Leader

    Please create an interview protocol with the questions for a leader I will be interviewing , attached the instructions

  • The Importance of Occupational Exposure Limits: A Discussion on the Use of OSHA’s PELs as a Safety Officer As a safety officer in a facility, it is crucial to ensure the health and safety of employees from potential occupational hazards. One

    Several organizations publish occupational exposure limits (OELs) including the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) permissible exposure limits (PELs), the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists’ (ACGIH) threshold limit values (TLVs), and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s (NIOSH) recommended exposure limits (RELs). Only OSHA’s PELs are legally enforceable. Discuss why you would only use the OSHA PEL at a facility where you were the safety officer, or alternatively, why you would choose to use one of the other OELs or a combination of the OELs. Please respond with 250 words

  • Exploring Race and Health Care in the United States Chapter 1 Response: When I think of the term “race,” I immediately think of physical characteristics such as skin color, facial features, and hair texture. I also think of the societal

    Please read chapter 1 and chapter 4 and respond 
    with a 200 word statement for each question. 
    Chapter 1 (race and the social construction of 
    difference)  
    Question 1. What does the term “race” makes you 
    Think of? Are you comfortable talking about race with your family or friends ? Why or why not ? What is your race? How do you see race as similar and /or different from ethnicity ? ( I’m Latina )! 
    Chapter 5- Racism and health care 
    Question 2. There is evidence to suggest that simply living as a person of color in the United States can 
    Result  in poor health. How might discrimination in 
    Education, economy, and housing create a perfect 
    storm   For discrimination in healthcare? Is it
    Possible for people of color to avoid these related 
    negative health outcomes? Why or why not? 

  • Exploring the Therapeutic Process and Considerations for Diverse Clients: A Social Worker’s Perspective

    Visit the Virtual Library and other academic resources to write a 3-page APA-style analytical essay explaining the therapeutic process and what aspects the clinician (social worker) should consider when engaging clients of diverse backgrounds. Do not forget to mention what the differences are when we working with a voluntary patient versus an involuntary one, what aspects should be considered when interviewing each type of client and what therapeutic model do you think will be more efficient to work with each population. Incorporate all vocabulary terms from the workshop into your essay.
    Vocabulary:
    1. Therapeutic process
    2. Interviewing techniques
    3. Multicultural clients
    4. Voluntary client
    5. Involuntary client

  • “Social Media’s Influence on Politics: Examining Engagement and Public Opinion”

    The Impact of Social Media on Political Engagement and Public OpinionThe Impact of Social Media on Political Engagement and Public OpinionThe Impact of Social Media on Political Engagement and Public Opinion

  • “The Impact of Social Media on Interpersonal Communication”

    Greetings, 
    Please see the attachment for the assignment. I want original work, no Chat GPT or AI. The word count of 600 MUST be adhered to, not including the cover or reference page. This is very important!  The format is Times New Roman 12-inch font, with one-inch margins and 
    APA.

  • “Improving Professionalism: Incorporating Supervisor Feedback into a 7000-Word Document”

    Hello,
    I need someone to apply my supervisor’s feedback properly on the document as I failed because of lack of profesionality of your colleagues .SO please don’t make cancel the order as I did before .Please don’t make a bid if you can’t give the best paper!!!
    Should have around 7000 words* excluding cover, summary, figures, tables
    and references. (*Hard limit)
    Thank you