CASE STUDY: CONSTRUCTABILITY REVIEW PROCESS OF A LARGE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AGENCY

Author(s):  
Edward Minchin ◽  
Yifeng Tian

Constructability is the optimum use of construction knowledge and experience to plan, design, procure, and manage field operations to achieve project objectives. Although there are many benefits to conducting constructability reviews (CRs) such as reduced cost and schedules, and fewer claims and change orders, current CRs still lack effectiveness in meeting industry demands for delivering construction contract documents promoting buildable projects. In the highway sector, transportation agencies have applied CRs at various levels, starting from the involvement of their own project team to soliciting external input from contractors before the project is even bid out. The objective of this paper is to investigate effective practices used by an agency in soliciting constructability input from contractors, given administrative and legal constraints. This was achieved through a comprehensive literature review of existing CR practices, followed by a case study of a transportation agency that has been implementing CRs involving contractor’s input, as well as content analysis of documents, forms, and tools used during their CR process. The interviews entailed personnel working in various departments, such as preconstruction, program management, construction, and environmental. It also included consultants and contractors working for the agency. The major conclusions drawn are that the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) lives up to its reputation of a de-centralized agency in the area of Constructability; FDOT does not routinely customize its CR Process to the details of each project; and FDOT is not one of the more progressive DOTs in the US in the area of Constructability.

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 276
Author(s):  
Moamen E. Abd Elraof

The construction of any river obstruction has some morphological impacts on the river bed and flow as it implies some disturbance to the river water flow. This disturbance causes local scour to occur due to bridge construction. For many reasons, there exists a need to protect these assets by continuous monitoring and maintenance. For this research, 6 th October Bridge was considered as a case study for bridges constructed on caissons along the River Nile. A field data (contour maps for the bed of the River Nile at year 1982and 2008) and computer model FDOT (developed by Florida Department of Transportation), was used to evaluate the depth of scour at the caissons of 6 th October Bridge. Conclusions and recommendations were highlighted.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zahid Sultan ◽  
Joshua Bomoteng ◽  
Mostyn Piko Philemon ◽  
Anthony Yalehen

Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Bennett

Cannabis (marijuana) is the most commonly consumed, universally produced, and frequently trafficked psychoactive substance prohibited under international drug control laws. Yet, several countries have recently moved toward legalization. In these places, the legal status of cannabis is complex, especially because illegal markets persist. This chapter explores the ways in which a sector’s legal status interacts with political consumerism. The analysis draws on a case study of political consumerism in the US and Canadian cannabis markets over the past two decades as both countries moved toward legalization. It finds that the goals, tactics, and leadership of political consumerism activities changed as the sector’s legal status shifted. Thus prohibition, semilegalization, and new legality may present special challenges to political consumerism, such as silencing producers, confusing consumers, deterring social movements, and discouraging discourse about ethical issues. The chapter concludes that political consumerism and legal status may have deep import for one another.


Author(s):  
Kasey Barr ◽  
Alex Mintz

This chapter examines the effect of group dynamics on the 2016 decision within the administration of President Barack Obama to lead the international coalition in a mission to liberate Raqqa, Syria, from the Islamic State. The authors show that whereas the groupthink syndrome characterized the decision-making process of the US-led coalition’s decision to attack Raqqa, it was polythink that characterized the decision-making dynamics both in the US-led coalition and within the inner circle of Obama’s own foreign policy advisors. Through case-study analysis, the authors illustrate that groupthink is more likely in strategic decisions, whereas polythink is more likely in tactical decisions.


Incarceration ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 263266632097780
Author(s):  
Alexandra Cox ◽  
Dwayne Betts

There are close to seven million people under correctional supervision in the United States, both in prison and in the community. The US criminal justice system is widely regarded as an inherently unmerciful institution by scholars and policymakers but also by people who have spent time in prison and their family members; it is deeply punitive, racist, expansive and damaging in its reach. In this article, we probe the meanings of mercy for the institution of parole.


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