Sentences with phrase «personal culpability»

"Personal culpability" refers to the level of responsibility or blame that an individual holds for their own actions or behavior. It is the idea that someone can be held accountable for the choices they make and the consequences that result from those choices. Full definition
His regulatory experience involves a wide range of matters including anti-money laundering and anti-bribery controls, listings rule breaches, conflicts of interest, suitability of investment advice, treatment of customers, client asset rules, market misconduct, competition law and personal culpability of individuals.
Without attempting to absolve individuals from personal culpability, we should note that many problems plaguing the schools are examples of good intentions gone awry.
Diamond says personal culpability lies with the trader.
Regardless of his limited personal culpability, there is a strong likelihood that the judicial inquiry will find he presided over a police force that failed to investigate industrial - scale law breaking despite having all the evidence it needed in three bin bags in the basement.
If the corporation gets sued or otherwise becomes liable to third parties, the individual directors are generally held safe from personal culpability, since the law acknowledges that they are collectively acting in a designated role as «the operating mind» or embodiment of the corporate entity.
The assumption of traditional moralism is that by emphasizing the individual's personal culpability one would make him more responsible and more moral.
Diamond denied any personal culpability for manipulations of the interbank lending rate during his appearance before the Commons» Treasury committee last Wednesday.
The ELA says the personal culpability of the executive concerned should be the only ground for clawback and not, as proposed, misbehaviour or material error, material downturn in financial performance, or material failure of risk management.
The jury found that the actions of the police had failed to provide for the health, safety and welfare of the victim, but that the commander in charge of the operation, Cressida Dick, bore «no personal culpability».
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z