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  2. Vulnerability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulnerability

    Vulnerability is defined in various ways depending on the nation and service arm concerned, but in general it refers to the near-instantaneous effects of a weapon attack. In aviation it is defined as the inability of an aircraft to withstand the damage caused by the man-made hostile environment. [ 31 ]

  3. Vulnerability assessment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulnerability_assessment

    A vulnerability assessment is the process of identifying, quantifying, and prioritizing (or ranking) the vulnerabilities in a system. Examples of systems for which vulnerability assessments are performed include, but are not limited to, information technology systems, energy supply systems, water supply systems, transportation systems, and communication systems.

  4. Social vulnerability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_vulnerability

    The work also showed that the greatest losses of life concentrate in underdeveloped countries, where the authors concluded that vulnerability is increasing. Chambers put these empirical findings on a conceptual level and argued that vulnerability has an external and internal side: People are exposed to specific natural and social risk.

  5. Vulnerability index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulnerability_index

    A 2002 paper then applied a vulnerability indexing model to analysis of vulnerability to sea level rise for a US coastal community. [18] At a 2008 Capacity Building Seminar at Oxford, the "Climate Vulnerability Index" [1] was presented with an application to the protection of tourist economies, which may be important to small island states and ...

  6. Occupational stress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_stress

    Underload: Having work that fails to use a worker's skills and abilities. [59] Workload as a work demand is a major component of the demand-control model of stress. [11] This model suggests that jobs with high demands can be stressful, especially when the individual has low control over the job.

  7. Women leaders face 30 types of bias in the workforce ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/women-leaders-face-30-types...

    That work, published in the Harvard Business Review, found that women in the workplace face bias regardless of their age, with their superiors often viewing them as too inexperienced if they are ...

  8. Workplace violence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workplace_violence

    Workplace violence is considered to be a significant hazard in its own right. Regulation 3 of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 states that, "every employer shall make a suitable and sufficient assessment of: The risks to the health and safety of his (or her) employees to which they are exposed whilst they are at work ...

  9. Precarious work - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precarious_work

    [1] [8] Scholars and critics who use the term "precarious work" contrast it with the "standard employment relationship", which is the term they use to describe full-time, continuous employment where the employee works on their employer's premises or under the employer's supervision, under an employment contract of indefinite duration, with ...