Sentences with phrase «future international negotiations»

Not exact matches

Negotiations between elites, surrender by the military or national and international pressure have not yet pushed the regime to yield power and seem unlikely to do so in the future.
The 2015 general election campaign will come at the same time as the next round of international UN negotiations on climate change, which campaigners say will be a critical moment in determining the planet's future.
The left - wing Bevan told his colleagues that their demand for unilateral nuclear disarmament would send a future Labour government «naked into the conference chamber» during international negotiations.
Early last year a new organisation, the Business Council for a Sustainable Energy Future, surfaced in international negotiations.
Andy White, president of the Resources Renewal Institute that co-published the report, said that the findings have a central role to play in future international climate negotiations.
Yoshua Bengio says that another possible important application is in computerized dialogue, and Schaeffer says that in the future these programs might be able to come up with answers to abstract social issues that can be expressed as games, like national politics or international climate negotiations.
In just three days of intensive pre-scheduled business appointments, more than 1,000 U.S. travel organizations from every region of the USA (representing all industry category components), and more than 1,300 international and domestic buyers from more than 70 countries conduct business negotiations that result in the generation of more than $ 4.7 billion in future Visit USA travel.
CDR solutions will likely require special treatment in international treaties (as many CDR techniques are less economically - viable than other GHG abatement approaches today), and it is important that today's negotiations pave the way for future CDR deployments.
Coming out of Copenhagen, many participants in the international climate negotiations (as well as informed observers), noted that the UNFCCC has real limitations as the sole venue for future climate negotiations: too many countries — 192, excessively stringent requirements for agreement — unanimity, and a distinct tendency to polarize debates between developed and developing countries.
The meeting will mark a decisive stage in negotiations on the future international agreement on a post-2020 regime, and will, as agreed in Durban, adopt the major outlines of that regime.
Former EPA international lawyer Barbara McLeod and Ken Cline suggested that an appropriate emblem for the climate negotiations would be a symbol with the earth surrounded by brackets — i.e. that the future of the planet was contested.
This disagreement over the future of the international climate regime has been at the root of the repeated fights in the climate negotiations over the last two years.
From spurring energy conservation to waste reduction and more, these tactics may yield meaningful opportunities to respond to climate change, especially as international negotiations to reduce atmospheric greenhouse - gas levels betray many people's hopes for a better future.
Hannah McKinnon, Director, Energy Futures and Transitions, Oil Change International: «What is currently on offer in these negotiations isn't cutting it.
Since any decision coming out of these negotiations will set precedents for future debates on international relations, it is important that the international community take the time to think through, and to carefully consider various (and sometimes conflicting) arguments, leaving no stone unturned.
This paper outlines several key recommendations that are particularly relevant for future international climate negotiations.
She is a regular speaker and — being an active member of Toastmasters International - enjoys delivering «TED - style» talks at various conferences in the legal sector to provoke interest and thoughts on various subjects that she feels particularly passionate about, such as the future of the legal profession and services, the lawyers» role in person to person diplomacy, gender equality and the advancement of women in leadership positions, or the challenges of cross-cultural communication and negotiations.
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