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Benjamin W. Mintz Benjamin W. Mintz was born in Wisconsin, grew up in New York City, and has been a resident of Washington, D.C. since1959. A graduate of the Columbia Law School, he served as a U.S. government attorney for more than 20 years, completing his government service as chief attorney of the Occupational Safety and Health Division of the U.S. Department of Labor during the first decade of the OSHA program's existence. He has written extensively on OSHA, including one textbook, OSHA: History, Law and Policy, chapter contributions to several other books, and articles. Professor Mintz also received his rabbinical ordination for Yeshiva University. He has lectured and taught on Jewish scholarly subjects, mostly related to the Hebrew Bible, before various community groups in the Washington, D.C. area, and in 1997 he received the Master Teacher Award from the Foundation for Jewish Studies of Washington, D.C. Professor Mintz teaches employment law, administrative law, law and public policy, professional responsibility, torts and Jewish law. BOOKS A Guide to Federal Agency Rulemaking. Washington, D.C.: Administrative Conference of the United States, Office of the Chairman, 1991. OSHA: History, Law, and Policy. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of National Affairs, 1984. BOOK CHAPTERS "History of Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration." In Fundamentals of Industrial Hygience (4th ed.), National Safety Council. "Development and Judicial Review of Standards" in Occupational Safety and Health Law (1999 Cumulative Supplement), the Bureau of National Affairs, 1999 "The Development of Occupational Safety and Health Standards" and "Judicial Review of Standards." In Occupational Safety and Health Law, Bureau of National Affairs, 1998. "Administrative Separation of Functions: OSHA and NLRB." Catholic University Law Review 47 (Spring 1998): 917.
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