Sentences with phrase «access disputes take»

Access disputes take some time and experimentation to get right.

Not exact matches

We reserve the right, but do not undertake the obligation to: (a) monitor or review the Sites and the Applications for violations of this Agreement and for compliance with our policies; (b) report to law enforcement authorities and / or take legal action against anyone who violates this Agreement; (c) refuse, restrict access to or the availability of, or remove or disable (to the extent technologically feasible) any Contribution or any portion thereof that may violate this Agreement, the law or any of our policies or are excessive in size or burdensome without prior notice to you; (d) manage the Sites and the Applications in a manner designed to protect our and third parties» rights and property or to facilitate the proper functioning of the Sites and the Applications; (e) screen our users or members, or attempt to verify the statements of our users or members and / or (f) monitor disputes between you and other users or to termination or block you and other users for violations of this Agreement.
History shows that when importing countries can't access live Australian animals — due to trade disputes, suspensions on cruelty grounds or drought — those countries take Australian boxed meat instead.
The governor may not have to take on the pope, but he may try to resolve a potential dispute with newly elected New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio over how to fund universal access to pre-kindergarten.
The governor may not have to take on the Pope, but he may in his budget try to resolve a potential dispute with newly elected New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio over how to fund universal access to pre kindergarten.
The governor may not have to take on the Pope, but he may in his budget try to resolve a potential dispute with newly elected New York City Mayor Bill deBlasio over how to fund universal access to pre kindergarten.
Question topics included the recent rollout of the City's municipal ID program, an internal PBA meeting reported to have degenerated into yelling and shoving over PBA President Pat Lynch's demands for an apology from the mayor and whether that provided «consolation» to the mayor, whether he takes comfort from the low number of PBA members reported to have signed «stay away from my funeral» statements, Bratton's comment that the «well was poisoned» by de Blasio's bring of former Sharpton aide Rachel Noerdlinger, a potential Teamsters strike at Hunts Point market, Governor Cuomo's consideration of legislation allowing public access to grand jury minutes, the mayor's objections to a City Council proposed bill outlawing police use of chokeholds, a reported Cuomo / Lynch meeting and what role the governor should fill in the Lynch / de Blasio dispute, whether the mayor is willing to acknowledge «missteps», the reports of Legionnaire's Disease in Co-op City, de Blasio's reaction to a possible 2016 Mitt Romney candidacy and when he last spoke with the Rev. Al Sharpton.
You will have to dispute it and will lose access to that money for however long it takes to settle the dispute.
You wrote: «Given that McIntyre's wish for access to the data will take time to be granted, this dispute will likely continue for some time.
The only way, the only way, to bring down the cost of dispute resolution and thus to improve access to justice where the improvements are most needed (to the nth degree) is to shorten the time it takes to resolve disputes.
If one assumes that «access to justice» and «justice» are public goods that the state takes over as soon as it detects a legal dispute (e.g., on filing a Notice of Civil Claim), then one's perspective changes.
Furthermore, since there is strong opposition from the international community to the idea of consumers having to pay even a nominal fee to have access to ODR services (this position seems to have been adopted by most delegations taking part in the UNCITRAL Working Group on Online Dispute Resolution for which the CRDP has observer status), there is only one option left, and that is to have the online business community bear the blunt of ODR costs.
The other relevant development is that, to the extent the politicians have in fact done something about the difficulties with access to justice in the courts, their response has mostly been to steer people out of the courts altogether, whether into alternative dispute - resolution fora or into administrative tribunals set up to take over the resolution of some common disputes that the courts would otherwise have dealt with in the past.
All Canadians deserve access to justice by which citizens are able to acquire information about legal matters, obtain legal services, resolve disputes through informal mechanisms, and take full advantage of their legal rights.
It takes longer times before land records are recorded, limited access of records, ongoing disputes over boundaries, and selling of land rights not owned by the seller and this is one source of the economic difficulties faced by most Ghanaians yet the courts are drowning in land disputes cases.
Judicial responses to alienation include: ordering an assessment; ordering supervised access on a permanent basis; intervention in the early stages of the dispute, before the problem has had time to become «true» alienation, or in the early years of a child's development; changing custody on a temporary basis; determining whether «pure» or «mixed» alienation is taking place; keeping the courts involved; suggesting counselling; making a finding of contempt; making a no - contact order; involving the Children's Aid Society; not making a parallel parenting order; meeting with the children; and in extreme cases, putting the alienating parent's actions on court record, in hopes that if the child revisits the issue as an adult, they may be able to see what actually took place.
The requirements for implementation are contained in articles 38 - 42 of the Declaration: States shall in consultation with indigenous peoples take appropriate legislative and other measures to achieve the Declaration; right to access financial and technical assistance for enjoyment of rights in the Declaration; right to prompt decision and just and fair procedures for resolution of conflicts and disputes with States and other parties; UN, PFII and other intergovernmental organisations contribute to full realisation of the Declaration.
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