By Michael G. Malloy
The boom in both commercial and recreational drone use in recent years has raised questions regarding how insurers treat the rapidly growing technology.
November/December 2017
By Jason Sears
I am fully aware of the irony of writing an article about work-life balance when I have three children under the age of 4.
By Srivathsan Karanai Margan
In insurance, moral hazard is the idea that a party that is protected from risk will behave differently than they would if they lacked that protection.
By Eric P. Harding
It’s late October as I write this column. Due to unseasonably high temperatures here in the mid-Atlantic, the leaves are just beginning to show their autumnal colors.
Letters submitted to Contingencies regarding the July/August 2017 issue.
By Jan Carstens
In 1984 my husband and I got married and decided to spend three weeks in Europe for our honeymoon. We were young and adventurous (and in retrospect, maybe a little stupid), so we decided to book flights but not lodging—we had no idea what countries/cities we were going to visit—except for our very first night in Amsterdam.
By Joe Allbright, John Have, Walter Marsh, Susan Mateja
Editor’s note: This is the third in a series of articles from the Health Practice International Committee on ideas from foreign models of health care that may assist the United States in finding cost-effective ways to deliver high-quality health care in an equitable and sustainable way.
By Jane Melia
No matter what industry your clients are in, chances are they already have data stored in the cloud.
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