Privacy
Policy This blog does not share personal information with third parties nor do we store any information about your visit to this blog other than to analyze and optimize your content and reading experience through the use of cookies You can turn off the use of cookies at anytime by changing your specific browser settings.
Privacy
Policy This blog does not share personal information with third parties nor do we store any information about your visit to this blog other than to analyze and optimize your content and reading experience through the use of cookies You can turn off the use of cookies at anytime by changing your specific browser settings.
The case is so rich with pregaming potential that even our friends at the Sentencing Law and Policy Blog didn't know what to write about it.
Not exact matches
COO Sheryl Sandberg explained why in a
blog post, noting «These are complicated issues, and while we don't believe any company's enforcement or
policies are perfect, we think that sharing best practices can help us all improve, especially smaller companies that may not have the resources to develop their own
policies.»
Actually, don't hold your breath, responds Harvard health care
policy expert Bob Laszewski on his
blog.
Given that our esteemed lawmakers can't seem to agree on anything these days, the entrepreneurship organization is a long way from being able to guarantee that such a measure will ever pass, but on the Hill's Congressional
Blog recently, Kauffman's
policy director Jason Wiens and Dane Stangler, the organization's vice president of research and
policy,
did make a strong case regarding why it should.
In a
blog post clarifying its
policy, the company said its televisions
do not monitor living room conversations, but they
do send voice data to Nuance Communications, the recognition technology provider, to evaluate and improve the feature.
October 11, 2012 Helping MBAs Turn into Successful Entrepreneurs with Business Friendly
Policies: What
do you think: Add to our Guest
Blog today
Nevertheless we
do blog on public
policy on a regular basis and
do submit pieces to the print media, which have been published.
Now he
does the same thing from his perch in Eugene, Ore., and his FedWatch
blog is must - reading for those interested in following U.S. monetary
policy.
In an earlier
blog post, we provided a brief survey of recent monetary
policy cycles in the U.S., showing that a higher Fed funds rate doesn't necessarily affect the yield on Treasury bonds in the same way.
Nice article list Wiep I left a comment at the «linkbuilding via
blog comments» article, I really don't like people promoting
blog comments as a link building tool who have a nofollow
policy on their own
blog...
(In fairness, his team
did follow up on this question in a post on the company's «Hard Questions»
blog, and has since updated its privacy
policy and ad settings to make them easier to navigate.)
To
do that, we have created some comment
policies at the
blog.
This
policy does not apply to the practices of third parties that Arsenal FC
Blog does not own or control, or to individuals that Arsenal FC
Blog does not employ or manage.
I think that Marion Nestle's
blog, Food Politics,
does a good job of discussing how public
policies actually reinforce poor food choices at the moment.
Recently I
did some housekeeping on The Lunch Tray by dividing up my «
blog roll» (the long list of links down and to the right) by topic, so if readers are specifically looking for help with family dinner or need sources for food
policy information, they'll know right where to go.
Recently I
did some housekeeping on The Lunch Tray by dividing up my «
blog roll» (the long list of links down and to the right) by topic, so if readers are specifically looking for help with family dinner or need sources for food
policy information,... [Continue reading]
Many other
blogs state clearly in their comments
policy that they don't engage in any Feminist 101 or Racism 101, or whatever and post a link to relevant material.
If you're looking for your comment and don't see it here, it's because you've violated The Lunch Tray's longstanding
policy against ad hominem, personal attacks on this
blog.
Did it really violate any school
policies for a teacher to take pictures and
blog about her own lunch?
I
do wish I saw more input from fathers in the parenting
blog - o - sphere and in our discussions of public
policy for parents and families.
Nutrition For the Future: This is the personal
blog of Dayle Hayes, MS, RD. Hayes writes this
blog independently of her membership various diet and nutrition organizations and she states clearly in her sidebar disclaimer that her views
do not reflect any official
policies of these organizations or agencies.
When I pressed Tom Harris on this at his
blog site last year his response, in essence, was to say: «Things like inequality don't depend on voting systems but on the
policies one adopts.»
Even with the growing police state, the Chinese government probably
does not want to risk losing even some of these beneficial relationships,» notes international lawyer Elizabeth Lynch, formerly a research fellow at New York University's U.S. - Asia Law Institute in New York City, at the China Law &
Policy blog.
British Columbia, Canada About
Blog Karate BC is a non profit organization and the recognized governing body for karate -
do (Karate) in British Columbia, Canada.Through its programs and leadership, Karate BC, in cooperation with its affiliates, supports the development of karate and the aspirations of its members by offering opportunities and setting procedures, standards and
policies.
Pavan Dhaliwal, director of public affairs and
policy at the BHA, said: «We acknowledge, of course, that there are plenty of «faith» schools out there in which problems of this kind described in some of the
blogs do not arise, or
do not arise to the same extent, but it remains the case that there are a huge number of people out there who have experienced indoctrination, misinformation, discrimination, neglect, and abuse during their childhoods as a result of the extensive freedoms and pervasive lack of oversight that «faith» schools of all kinds enjoy.
They have also
done this, repeatedly since 2011, despite the major research - based issues (see for example a National Education
Policy Center (NEPC) analysis that followed; see also a recent / timely post about this on another
blog at techcrunch.com).
The views and opinions expressed in this
blog are those of the authors and
do not necessarily reflect the official
policy or position of the Assessment Work Group, CASEL or any of the organizations involved with the work group.
Some schools are well on their way with the
policy detail and I would recommend reading the
blogs of John Tomsett, Tom Sherrington and Liam Collins in the state sector and Mark S Steed in the independent sector to get a sense of what some schools are
doing.
In a
blog post [http://bit.ly/1UklSSE], White House Domestic
Policy Council Director Cecilia Muñoz said that for all the good it has done, the policy «is not a permanent solution to our nation's immigration pro
Policy Council Director Cecilia Muñoz said that for all the good it has
done, the
policy «is not a permanent solution to our nation's immigration pro
policy «is not a permanent solution to our nation's immigration problems.
What I would suggest would be to
do more in - depth research on
blogs before stereotypically umping us all together based on the review
policies of a few individuals.
(Why ebook vendors aren't
doing more interesting things on Android where they aren't held back by the platform owner's
policies is beyond me, but that's a
blog post for a different day.)
A mass email tells me that you didn't take the time to personalize things, you probably didn't go to my
blog, you likely didn't check out my
policies.
The first step when setting up a book
blog and hanging your shingle as a reviewer is to set up your review
policies and make them clearly available to authors — if they blogger hasn't
done that, chances are good they may have other crucial things not set up, as well.
Don't forget to review our Get Answers section as well as our
blog for articles on new developments in higher education and student loan
policy and practice.
Don't forget to review our Get Answers section as well as our
blog for articles on new developments in higher education and student loan
policy.
If you don't see a disclosure
policy on a
blog or website, that site or
blog may be violating the law or at the very least the Code of Ethics.
Don't worry, this
blog has a strict no politics
policy!
A couple years ago, The Points Guy
blog did a comprehensive roundup of these
policies.
It didn't take long for the person behind the account to adopt a scorched earth
policy in its takedown of key art world tropes: conceptual abstract painters showing at Bushwick outposts of Belgian galleries, pedestrian rabble - rousing headlines churned out by art
blog sweatshops, people who ask «how the show was» only to hear about «how nice the space is,» Urs Fischer — et cetera.
Finally, on the
policy side, if there's evidence that existing technology is inadequate to affordably decarbonize a growing global energy system on a scale that would matter to the climate, and it's clear that we've utterly disinvested in energy research for decades, it's my job to write that, as I
did in 2006, and repeat it on the
blog as much as necessary.
P.S.
Do you consult Arthur Sulzberger or consider NYTimes public
policy positions before deciding what to post on your
blog?
So
did John Holdren on the
blog of the Office of Science and Technology
Policy.
Reblogged this on I Didn't Ask To Be a
Blog and commented: ``... a blatant misuse of scientific authority to advocate for specific socioeconomic
policies.»
Many others are simply not very good — for example, Jason Harrow's 2011 reprint from The Harvard Law and
Policy Review
Blog argues that nothing should be
done about climate change because, well, nothing can be
done right now; renewables are too expensive, and are unlikely to get cheaper very fast.
There is a stated opinion by many on this
blog that the climate scientists are liars, that the data is deliberately fudged and that AGW is therefore untrue and should at all costs be killed off and buried before it gets a chance to take hold on
policy that
does not support the BAU scenario.
If you don't like or understand the comment
policy, there are plenty of other
blogs for you try.
I apologise; comments above
doing nothing but whining about the moderation
policy at another
blog are clearly far suprerior in quality to mine making fun of such.
Editorial
policies at this
blog discourage posters trying to
do so.