Throughout the day, powerful keynotes, panel discussions and chats will be held, designed to address issues that
affect women in the industry, including the rise of women's leadership.
Not exact matches
There's the ongoing special - counsel investigation into whether the Trump campaign aided a Russian campaign to aid Trump's candidacy and defeat his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton; there's the associated inquiry into whether the president obstructed justice when he fired former FBI Director James Comey, whom he had asked not to investigate his former national - security adviser; there are the president's hush - money payments to
women with whom he allegedly had extramarital affairs, made through his personal attorney, Michael Cohen, and facilitated by corporate cash paid to influence the White House; there is his ongoing effort to interfere with the Russia inquiry and politicize federal law enforcement; there are the foreign governments that seem to be utilizing the president's properties as vehicles for influencing administration policy; there's the emerging evidence that Trump campaign officials sought aid not only from Russia, but from other foreign countries, which may have
affected Trump's foreign policy; there are the ongoing revelations of the president's Cabinet officials» misusing taxpayer funds; there is the accumulating evidence that administration decisions are made at the behest of private
industry,
in particular those
in which Republican donors have significant interests.
Katarzyna Kozyra is feminist artist, widely known by her controversial installations Animal Pyramide, Blood relationship (1995), Olympia (1996), Bath House (1997 - 1999)
in which she addresses taboo themes such as
industry of animal killing, sexuality of the
woman body
affected by cancer, topics of intimacy or processes of societal gender construction and gender - related pop girls star style clichés.
Rising temperatures and more frequent flooding events are likely to increase with climate change, and
in Bangladesh, this will
affect the lives of the 4 million people working
in the garment
industry, who are disproportionately
women.
Mesothelioma
affects men more often than
women because more men worked
in the
industries where asbestos exposure was common.