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  1. Acceptable Risk

    Acceptable Risk

    2001 · Thriller · 1h 36m

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  1. Acceptable Risk is an Irish television crime drama series, broadcast on RTÉ, that first aired on 24 September 2017. Produced by Facet4 Media and Saffron Moon for RTÉ Television, Acceptable Risk stars Elaine Cassidy as Dublin-based Sarah Manning, whose husband Lee is murdered whilst on a business trip in Montreal.

  2. Acceptable Risk. When her husband, Lee, is murdered, Sarah Manning comes to realize that she knows nothing about his past. Sarah begins to question who Lee actually was and what he did in his work for a powerful global organization.

  3. Aug 15, 2017 · Acceptable risk is a risk exposure that is deemed acceptable to an individual, organization, community or nation. Acceptable risks are defined in terms of the probability and impact of a particular risk.

  4. ACCEPTABLE RISK. The term "acceptable risk" describes the likelihood of an event whose probability of occurrence is small, whose consequences are so slight, or whose benefits (perceived or real) are so great, that individuals or groups in society are willing to take or be subjected to the risk that the event might occur.

  5. Jan 9, 2002 · Acceptable risk is a function of many factors and varies considerably across industries (e.g. mining vs. medical devices vs. farming). Local cultures also play an important role in risk acceptability, as has been experienced by our colleagues working in global companies.

  6. Sep 29, 2022 · Accepting risk, or risk retention, is a conscious strategy of acknowledging the possibility for small or infrequent risks without taking steps to hedge, insure, or avoid those risks.

  7. Accepting risk is the amount of financial uncertainty that an individual or an enterprise can retain without overly insuring, hedging, or mitigating. Accepting risk assumes various financial and organizational approaches meant to provide a financial buffer during risk materialization.

  8. The idea of “acceptable” is a personal observation made by the individual, so while science and policy have helped create allowable limits and recognized standards to define what is acceptable, individuals’ perceptions, attitudes, and beliefs may or may not align with those definitions.

  9. In a broader context, the definition of an acceptable risk depends on who is assessing the risk. There is an ethical difference depending on whether a risk is self-imposed or imposed by others and who stands to gain or lose as a result of the assessment.

  10. The chapter offers several examples of the use of the term acceptable risk, and discussions that address the impossibility of achieving zero risk levels. It explores the inadequacy of “minimum risk” as a replacement term for “acceptable risk”.

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