Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 340
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4422-1843-7 • Hardback • December 2012 • $63.00 • (£48.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-8108-9576-8 • Paperback • December 2017 • $38.00 • (£30.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-1-4422-1845-1 • eBook • December 2012 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Ronald D. Brown served four years as an assistant U.S. attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice. After his tenure as a federal prosecutor, he spent the next decade in private law practice in Newark, during which he settled a $1 million medical malpractice suit, successfully argued a precedent-setting corporate case before the state’s highest court, and tried more than one hundred criminal jury trials, including a dozen homicides. He studied labor law and alternative dispute resolution at New York University Law School and also studied labor and employment law at Columbia Law School, from which he earned an LLM in 2004. He has taught criminal law and lectured extensively on issues of criminal law and labor and employment law. He has served as a labor law advisor to the U.S. army and as a labor and employee specialist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C.
Introduction
1. Murder in the Workplace: Nature, Scope, and Origins
2. Why So Little is Known About the Problem
3. Definitely Not Your Average Girl Next Door
4. The Limits of the Human Resources Function
5. Some Were Crazy, Some Not So Crazy
6. The Influence of Gender & Race
7. The Problems and Politics of Being the “Boss”
8. Debunking the Myths / Confirming the Facts
9. Deciphering the “Language” of Workplace Suicide
10. The Warning Signs: the Tick, Tick, Tick of the Bomb
11. Ironies Trends, and Troublesome Facts
12. Employer Response, Responsibility and Resolve
13. Guidelines for Workplace Safety, Security, and Control
14. Conclusion
Endnotes
Appendix
Selected Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
About the Author
A unique exploration of the growing epidemic of murder at work. Ronald Brown has crafted a highly readable and fascinating look at this unfathomable and shocking phenomenon. Written with historical perspective, statistics, factual accounts of numerous events and detailed analysis the reader gains not only insight into the genesis of the problem, but a better understanding of the underlying fears that often drive these assailants. While debunking the myths about workplace homicide and exposing the futility of some preventative policies and procedures, in the end Brown provides important preventative rules and recommendations that can make a difference. Timely and useful, this book is a must read for CEOs and their staff, HR executives, middle managers, safety and security professionals and anyone concerned about this abhorrent problem sweeping the nation.
— Richard A. Pollock, CSP, President & CEO, CLMI Safety Training
Dying on the Job highlights an important problem all concerned with the state of American workers must confront.
— Samuel Estreicher, Dwight D. Opperman Professor of Law and director, Center for Labor and Employment Law, NYU Law
Sadly, too many workplace killings take place. Ronald Brown's book, the first ever about this subject, shows the terrible number, the variety of circumstances and causes, and ways society could address this problem. Managers, HR professionals, and anyone who works in an office need this information.
— Lance Liebman, professor and former dean, Columbia University School of Law
With this fascinating book on workplace murder, Ronald Brown has filled a gaping hole in the literature on workplace violence, and he has done so with lively and accessible prose and a prosecutor’s eye for detail. His ‘closing argument’ on the role of guns in the epidemic of workplace murders should provoke serious and much-needed debate on American gun culture and permissive gun laws.
— Cynthia Estlund, Catherine A. Rein Professor, NYU School of Law
This is an excellent book; the first serious book-length study on work-place homicide. It contains valuable empirical information and useful suggestions for prevention.
— Roger S. Clark, Board of Governors Professor, Rutgers Law School, Camden, New Jersey
Dying on the Job addresses the most critical work place problem in the US. Written in a style which is both accessible and graphic, it touches on all the relevant aspects of this worrisome matter. This is the best examination of violence, murder and mayhem at work that I have seen. Policy makers and all who are concerned about the workplace will do well to read this exhaustive discussion and to heed its recommendations. I recommend it highly.
— William B. Gould IV, Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus, Stanford Law School, Chairman of the National Labor Relations Board (1994-98)
This book is an important discussion of a frighteningly prevalent phenomenon, that of workplace homicide. It is a book all employers should read, as it provides information which can help them take steps to reduce the likelihood that an employee will be the victim of workplace homicide.
— Carol Bohmer, visiting associate professor, Department of Government at Dartmouth College; teaching fellow, Department of War Studies at King's College, London
• The first book to focus on workplace murders, while other studies concentrate on workplace violence
• The first and only study that focuses on murder exclusively between employees, over issues that were job-related, and that relies statistically on more than 350 cases of workplace murder