Sentences with phrase «about deference»

[94] The rhetoric about deference is perhaps matched by the rhetoric about «expertise».
Arguments about deference touch on deep questions of jurisprudence that transcend national boundaries.
It will be interesting to see what the Supreme Court of Canada says about deference on questions of constitutional law in its decision, expected next year, in the Trinity Western University litigation.
So critics of TTIP's economics, as well as those worried about its deference to corporate interests, are free to fear the worst.

Not exact matches

«There has to be some deference» to the president's decisions about national security, he added.
They sure do alot of searching about link building, On my companies website I noticed that when you view visitors by country the link building page has huge deference then all other page on the site.
That is what savings rates and investing is all about: striking the optimal balance between enjoying your life in the here and now while paying proper deference to the kind of lifestyle you want your future self to attain.
«And so biblical modesty isn't about managing the sexual impulses of other people; it's about cultivating humility, propriety and deference within ourselves.»
The footage serves as a plausible facsimile of the war as defined by the Pentagon; it tells viewers nothing about the origins and nature of an enemy that Republicans and Democrats alike have been ignoring for the last ten years, out of deference to the demands of Big Oil and in the hope that a world of six billion people might wake up one morning, consider the odds, and start bowing to Bill Gates, Michael Jordan, and the Goddess of Democracy.
When I first mentioned that I'd been asked by my publisher to take the word «vagina» out of my manuscript for A Year of Biblical Womanhood in deference to the general preferences of Christian bookstores, I never expected you guys to care, much less do something about it.
Here's an idea — instead of AA'ers how about we call ourselves AnAl's = in deference to all the accountants we attract
This way of thinking about what we should do is explicitly based on reason, experience, and empathy and respect for others, rather than on tradition or deference to authority.
Even in the depths of misery — in 2000, say, or in 2004 — the party has shown an alarming capacity for self - delusion, deploying all that outdated tripe from the age of deference about the secret weapon of loyalty.
It notes that financial conflicts of interest (Duke investigators had patents on technology and ties to companies developing the tests) and deference to a senior professor may have influenced the university to dismiss concerns about the papers.
They hope to create a debate about universities, which for too long have sailed «on seas of unwarranted deference
There is some humor in their dynamic; Ramsay presents Joe's mama's - boy deference by having him arrive at her house while Psycho is playing on television, hinting that there's a bit of Norman Bates's mania in his devotion (he even jokes about stabbing her in the shower).
Issues about knowledge versus religion, acceptance versus hate, or most importantly fate vs. free will are all tossed out there, only to have their surfaces skimmed in deference to the central romance plot.
We'd do better to greet these analyses with less deference, more skepticism, and more questions about the practical implications.
It's partly because the topic is highly relevant to my forthcoming Letters to a Young Education Reformer, partly because of the well - deserved attention to Don Hirsch's new book Why Knowledge Matters, partly because expert predictions about everything from the consequences of Brexit to our current election have been so off, and partly because deference to (a vaguely conceived) «expertise» offers a fault line to so many of our current debates.
Inside Higher Ed, July 2, 2012 «This gubernatorial concern about board appointments is a significant departure from an era when there was more deference to institutions about who they wanted on boards, said Richard Chait, a professor at Harvard's Graduate School of Education who studies university governance.»
Some educators harbor worrisome values: moral relativism, atheism, doubts about the superiority of democracy, undue deference to the «pluribus» at the expense of the «unum,» discomfort with patriotism, cynicism toward established cultural conventions and civic institutions.
[7] The government's predictions about the efficacy of its remedies are entitled to deference.
With all due deference to the name of this site, but we — and apparently Qualcomm — need to sit up and think about the change just round the corner, often called «convergence».
That is what savings rates and investing is all about: striking the optimal balance between enjoying your life in the here and now while paying proper deference to the kind of lifestyle you want your future self to attain.
Monumental yet ethereal, these works addressed Minimalist sculpture with polite deference while striking up bold conversations about urban preservation.
Yet scientists» concerns about the societal consequences of climate change deserve no special deference.
And it is in deference to those who legitimately object to being analogized to holocaust deniers that I am very specific about how I use the term denier.
Yet Geoff is quite right about EU and BBC deference to the IPCC — what else is out there?
Now, in talking about Shell's plans to drill in the Arctic, Salazar shows a scary degree of some combination of naïvité and deference to Shell.
As far back as 2002, it appeared to me that, when questioned about global warming, Dr. Marburger would respond like someone who was looking over his shoulder in deference to Bush - Cheney political sensitivities on this issue.
Even though the site is sponsored by e-discovery company Fios, it foregoes commerce in deference to its mission, which is to provide news, information and resources about e-discovery.
Therefore his decision about the signature on the prescribed form, even if that form was created by Getup Ltd., should be given deference.
Stating that «in those few minutes was illustrated so much that is enraging about the broader justice system: Its collective overweening self - satisfaction; its increasing deference to the... [more]
Committee members asked tough questions about whether legislative changes are needed, deference to decisions made by other law societies, national mobility issues and constitutional issues about freedom of religion and equality.
In essence, Gorsuch has expressed doubts about the Supreme Court of the United States's Chevron decision, which holds that administrative agencies are owed deference in their interpretations of their home statutes, at least where that statute is ambiguous.
We hear and read long soliloquies from the courts about mutual respect, deference to each other's decisions and judicial comity.
At a media briefing this morning in St. John's, NL, where the chief justice addressed the Canadian Bar Association's council, McLachlin said she's not worried about lack of deference for the courts.
The question of effort expended will remain (though the rule about giving deference to successful counsel may wane), but we can add to that a new set of questions about the appropriateness of a chosen procedure.
Deference is not justified by arguing that trial judges are always right about such matters, but rather that having a final outcome is preferable to having a reversal that encourages more appeals in the name of achieving «perfect justice» (which dovetails, of course, with «justice as proportionality» arguments that getting what is arguably the «right answer» is often not worth the public or private cost).
The Lawyer's editor, Catrin Griffiths, says of Slaughters, that «an assessment of its true model is not served by misplaced deference, and we're talking about business model here, not its M&A brand».
Furthermore, the fact that the decision about timeliness was not explicit should not cause the reviewing court to «gut the deference owed to a tribunal» (para 54).
Deference is about the way in which a court treats an administrative decision, primarily on judicial review but also in other contexts, where the legitimacy of the decision is in question.
The first issue, an administrative law problem, asked what level of deference the court should afford the Department of Education Office for Civil Rights about the duties of educational institutions to investigate allegations of student - on - student assault that occur off campus.
Interestingly Justice Moldaver who wrote about a very strong presumption of deference in McLean joins the dissent here in Capilano as does Chief Justice McLachlin who seems to have abandoned her support for the Dunsmuir approach.
Epstein JA held that since the application judge considered all the evidence she was required to, her determination about the validity of the notices was entitled to deference.
I want to come back to the issue of judicial review — both of legislation and of administrative decisions — and deference, about which I wrote earlier this week.
At the start of 2014, we blogged here about a decision of the B.C. Supreme Court that B.C.'s Health Professions Review Board (the «HPRB») must, when reviewing the adequacy of an investigation, grant deference to a registrar who conducts an...
But it is also possible to ask mid-level questions about whether, given a set of assumptions or features of a legal system, deference on questions of law makes sense.
Dunsmuir, Chevron, and what Canadians and Americans can learn from each other about judicial deference and interventionism
In that post, I suggested that our views on deference in judicial review are a function of our deeper beliefs on such principles as democracy and the Rule of Law, as well as on the institutional competence of the various branches of government, and that a coherent set of such beliefs could produce superficially inconsistent views about the degree of deference appropriate in various sorts of judicial review.
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