In a recent post, Christine addressed the problems of vandalism of dockless bike share schemes; it reminds us of the Tragedy of the Commons, described in the Guardian as «the economic theory that individuals using a shared resource often act according to their own interests and to the detriment of the shared resource... With bikes literally littering the street, riders become less mindful of how they treat the bikes and where they leave them when there is always another to pick up.&raqu
In a
recent post, Christine addressed the problems of vandalism of dockless bike share
schemes; it reminds us of the Tragedy of the Commons, described
in the Guardian as «the economic theory that individuals using a shared resource often act according to their own interests and to the detriment of the shared resource... With bikes literally littering the street, riders become less mindful of how they treat the bikes and where they leave them when there is always another to pick up.&raqu
in the Guardian as «the economic theory that individuals using a shared resource often act according to their own interests and to the detriment of the shared resource... With bikes literally littering the street, riders become less mindful of how they treat the bikes and where they leave them when there is always another to pick up.»
This is our second of three
posts on the Ontario Court of Appeal's
recent decision
in DBDC Spadina Ltd. v. Walton 2018 ONCA 60 arising out of a complex fraud
scheme perpetrated by Norma and Ronauld Walton.
Following on from last week's
post on why graduates should ditch graduate
schemes in favour of more attainable options, this week I've invited Amy Burton, a
recent graduate, to share the secrets and strategies that helped her to land her first job — just one month after graduating.