In my experience, the problems occur when design-build becomes competitive engineering/construction where cost and not quality is the driving factor. The owners and general contractors drive most of these problems but it takes the subcontractors to complete the "circle of failure" and agree to do the work under unfavorable conditions. Most subcontractors can not see past the work they are doing on a given day and the implications of future performance problems are the last thing on their mind when the rain starts.
The essence of this is when one has a crappy pile of soil adjacent to hole to be filled in or a wall to be back-filled. Human nature is to take the nearby crummy soil and fill in the hole or backfill the wall. It is even better when it is late in the day or on Saturday when no one is around to question the decision. I have reviewed many wall installations where the contract plans, the project specifications, and the shop drawings all clearly call for granular backfill and onsite clays are used. Of course, everyone on the entire project site is surprised by this observation except the engineers involved. The contractors then submit a change request for the granular backfill since they could not read the documents.
Thus QA provisions and language that describes responsibility begins which is somewhat useless since the same people who can not read the documents are required to read the "fine print" also. I am a little jaded as a result of my experience but it happens over and over again. It just takes people to read, understand, and enforce basic construction documents in the field. If one does not know what the #200 sieve is or how to interpret it, they should ask some one who does.
'nuff said.