Sentences with phrase «new analysis argues»

A screwy permitting process, a new analysis argues, makes answering those questions that much harder.
Schools are investing in «integrated instructional systems» without carefully considering whether the computer - based teaching networks are worth their potentially high costs, a new analysis argues.
Those results are overstated, a new analysis argues.
New analysis argues it's more environmentally friendly to convert corn and other crops to electricity first

Not exact matches

A brief summary can't do justice to their analysis, which draws on rich historical research to argue that capitalism develops in stages and that we're on the cusp of a new one.
Before getting into a more detailed analysis of the various biblical passages involved, Matthew takes Chapter 2 to argue that new information about sexuality ought to compel Christians to rethink their interpretation of Scripture.
Facing numerous analyses showing his signature jobs programs misallocated resources and put few New Yorkers to work, Gov. Andrew Cuomo argued today that any such assessments are only a matter of political point of view.
Marc LaVorgna, a spokesman for the mayor, refuted the analysis, arguing that savings from attrition do not come from people retiring, but from not hiring new people to replace them.
Meanwhile, the Independent Budget Office released its own rebuttal as Walcott spoke, publishing a new analysis that argues the mayor's plan over-states the need for teacher layoffs by more than 1,600 positions.
The analysis, published September 7 in the journal PLoS Medicine, is based on some 1,500 e-mails, contracts and other documents made public in July 2009, after The New York Times and PLoS Medicine successfully argued that their release would be in the public interest.
Environmental groups praised the new policy document, while Republican lawmakers and industry groups expressed dismay that adding another layer of analysis to environmental reviews would slow down what they argue is an already glacial process.
That paper launched a lively debate, and today a group at the State University of New York at Stony Brook has fired back: The authors argue in Nature that the earlier analysis was flawed, and cancers are due to this «bad luck» only 10 % to 30 % of the time, STAT reports.
In an update to an analysis first published in June 2005, Bufe and colleague David Perkins, a USGS geophysicist also in Denver, argue that the most recent round of large temblors may mark the beginning of a new global outbreak of megaquakes.
Although some have argued that a renewed emphasis on desegregation could help narrow the gap, a new EdNext analysis shows that over this same time period, schools have continued to become more, not less, diverse.
A new — and very helpful — analysis of the research helps tease this out and perhaps can at last break the infuriating log - jam between those who argue technology is a distraction at best and those who argue it is an extremely positive force.
The New Schools Network (NSN) has today released an analysis of exclusion data that reveals 20 children are excluded from school each day for racist abuse, arguing that the new category of opening free schools where there is a «social need» would allow groups to «create schools designed to build community cohesion&raquNew Schools Network (NSN) has today released an analysis of exclusion data that reveals 20 children are excluded from school each day for racist abuse, arguing that the new category of opening free schools where there is a «social need» would allow groups to «create schools designed to build community cohesion&raqunew category of opening free schools where there is a «social need» would allow groups to «create schools designed to build community cohesion».
In September, the Brookings Institution touted a new analysis that argued that state financial - aid systems «undermine» federal financial aid (because merit - based state aid is insufficiently redistributive).
Norton argues that the exhibition was not intended to be a history lesson on the year, and instead to be an analysis of the interlocking topics and events, and how they influenced the art world that year: «It takes the shape of a kind of vertical cross-section of artistic production in New York City that will continue to transform and rewrite itself into the future.»
Discussing an artwork by the Swedish artists Goldin + Senneby and a brief but important building occupation in Oakland, California, Myers will argue that new forces of financial speculation and digitization inflect a Lefebvrean analysis of space in the present, and produce new challenges and possibilities for urban resistance.
But the new study shows that the current warming can be fully explained by including ENSO variations in the analysis and that while changes in CO2 levels must be considered in the analysis, it turned out that they can safely be ignored, which is even more than most skeptics have long argued.
We argue that had the new science indicating a lower equilibrium climate sensitivity been properly incorporated into the determination of the SCC used by the DOE, it would have had a significant impact on the cost / benefit analysis used to justify the new regulation.
A recent rise in deadly, debilitating, and expensive heatwaves was caused by climate change, argues a new statistical analysis published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
A new statistical analysis argues that climate change was the cause of this and other extreme summer heat events.
One view — advocated most prominently by Kristen Tiscione and Ellie Margolis — suggests that e-memos constitute a new and distinct legal writing genre.23 These commentators posit that the change in medium — from paper to email — creates a fundamental shift in the way that legal analysis is conducted and communicated.24 These scholars argue, for example, that the comparative informality of the e-memo and its lack of prescribed elements creates a more organic format, where writers are free to combine traditional sections like the facts, brief answer, question presented, and conclusion in ways that are more «accessible, efficient, and appropriate.»
But we are neglectful of our students and of tomorrow's clients if we do not extend our training to encompass new disciplines that I argue in the book will be central to the delivery of legal services in the future — such as legal risk management, legal project management, legal knowledge engineering and legal process analysis.
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