|
|
|
|
Issue
|
|
September 1, 2006
|
|
|
Cover Story
|
For Whom The Bell Tolls
By Beaumont Vance
Carriers and reinsurers, falling short in meeting the needs of corporate risk managers in the age of the "megacatastrophe," are in danger of becoming irrelevant.
MORE
|
|
|
Features
|
Landing a Risk Career
By Paula L. Green
How Cheryl P. Johnson, a former flight attendant for Braniff Airways, ended up managing risk for the Dallas public schools.
MORE
Also:
At the Peak
|
|
Saving Benefits For the Future
By Pamela Caggianelli and Norman Hursh
More and more employers are concerned with promoting health and wellness in the workplace. They're faced with aging baby boomers and their replacements, 20-somethings who aren't so healthy themselves.
MORE
|
|
Surviving in The General Liability Jungle
By Jim Thayer
How buyers and brokers can strengthen their general liability claims process.
MORE
|
|
A Land Where Time Stands Still
By Cyril Tuohy
Four years on, and agents are still frustrated at the amount of data entry they need to perform with their software.
MORE
|
|
What London's 1666 Fire Says About Katrina
By Peter Rousmaniere
Two devastating events, separated by 339 years, show how far risk management and insurance have, or haven't, come.
MORE
|
|
|
Columns
|
|
|
|
Departments
|
|
|
|
Special Reports
|
Reinsurance
|
Reinsurance markets are increasingly coming to the rescue of corporate risk managers, who need to differentiate their risks to those who will be providing capacity at the right price. Reinsurers are also coming to the rescue of the poorest farmers of the Horn of Africa.
|
|
More Special Reports
|
|
Industry Risk Report
|
Pharmaceuticals
Risk managers in Big Pharma have to swallow a bitter pill if they hope to transfer their product liability risk to insurers, but it is by no means their only exposure. Drug companies have to get their product to market first and foremost, so supply-chain issues demand a good dose of risk management. Because the big money is in big brand names, managing intellectual property is crucial. And to protect their bosses from the fallout if any problems arise, CROs prescribe D&O coverage. Click above to read more on this industry, or view the industry risk table.
|
|
More Industry Risk Reports
|