5/12/12 11-12am PS318 Dr Nandini Hayes Note-taker Zia Last week – we talked about PCR and how important it is in the forensic setting. We will finish off talking about PCR‚ and then we will discuss how it can be used. If we go back to the slide of the double stranded DNA‚ and if we take that to a high temperature‚ the two strands separate‚ you then add the primers‚ which interact with ? On the strand‚ synthesis takes place in the 5-3 direction‚ then you end up with 2 molecules identical to
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EMPLOYMENT ISSUES The Workplace Types of Employment Employee – Someone who works for another or for an organisation and is paid with a wage or salary Employer – A person who organisation who hires others (employees) to work for them and pays them Self-employed – Those who operate their own business and sell goods or provide services Casual Employment – When an employee works irregularly for an indefinite period of time and is paid on an hourly basis Part-time Employment – When an employee
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Forensic auditing’ covers a broad spectrum of activities‚ with terminology not strictly defined in regulatory guidance. Generally‚ the term ‘forensic accounting’ is used to describe the wide range of investigative work which accountants in practice could be asked to perform. The work would normally involve an investigation into the financial affairs of an entity and is often associated with investigations into alleged fraudulent activity. Forensic accounting refers to the whole process of investigating
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particular form of White Collar Crime is worker’s compensation fraud. One example of workers’ compensation fraud was reported on by ABC News and involved Bruce Gilbert‚ a bus driver who “talked like a five year old‚ a problem his wife blamed on an ‘on-the-job’ accident” (Hunter). Gilbert’s wife claimed that her husband suffered from a “regressive mental ailment that effectively gave him the mental capacity of a child of about five” (Hunter). Over the course of 10 years‚ the Gilberts received approximately
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three hours are‚ as if a tight rope walk for the examinees‚ or walking on a razor’s edge for‚ it is these hours which can and will make or mar the future of the student. Even though at the face of it these three hours in an examination hall appear to be a hoax of an examination system‚ it appears as though there is no other practical method of testing the knowledge of students that is of course a must. Until a new method of examining is evolved I am afraid
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1. What is forensic science? the application of science to the criminal justice system. 2. What three tasks or responsibilities does a forensic scientist have? collect and analyze the evidence found at a crime scene‚ apply the techniques from the physical sciences and use their knowledge of these areas in order to make sense of the evidence that has been collected from a crime scene‚ interpret the evidence. 3. What criteria might be used to establish someone as an expert witness? consideration
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find the perpetrator‚ but the key to cracking the case lies in the evidence. The study of evidence is known as forensic science‚ which applies scientific information to the physical proof. The field of forensic science is vast‚ so scientists specialize in certain areas: forensic biology‚ forensic toxicology‚ forensic pathology‚ or forensic anthropology (Forensic Sciences). Forensic biology is the study of bodily fluids and DNA. Biologists can build a suspect’s
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INTRODUCTION Forensic radiology has a long tradition in the forensic sciences. Its history started in 1895 when the first radiograph was made by Conrad roentgen. Three years later‚ in 1898 postmortem radiographic examination was introduced. Forensic radiology so far as depended almost exclusively on the X-ray and the static image captured on the roetgenogram. Uses and utilization of Radiology in Forensic Dentistry 1‚ 2‚ 3 Radiographs have helped to solve difficult cases in the forensic science. 1
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rapidly growing in almost every region of the world. Although young people today are the most educated generation ever‚ both industrialised and developing countries are failing to increase employment opportunities for them. The lack of opportunities is of course linked to the general state of the economy and employment situation but it is also a result of the mismatches between the skills young people possess and the skills required by the labour market. All of these factors can lead to long periods of
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LAWS OF MALAYSIA REPRINT Act 265 EMPLOYMENT ACT 1955 Incorporating all amendments up to 1 January 2006 PUBLISHED BY THE COMMISSIONER OF LAW REVISION‚ MALAYSIA UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF THE REVISION OF LAWS ACT 1968 IN COLLABORATION WITH PERCETAKAN NASIONAL MALAYSIA BHD 2006 2 Laws of Malaysia ACT 265 EMPLOYMENT ACT 1955 First enacted … Revised … … … … … … … … … 1955 (F.M. Ordinance No. 38 of 1955) 1981 (Act 265 w.e.f. 18 February 1982) PREVIOUS REPRINTS First Reprint Second
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