Apparent attempts
at civil conversation has failed.
Not exact matches
Anyway, yes, this is all rather ugly in some very unpleasant ways, but I think the overall
conversation here has been relatively
civil —
at least within the framework I'm working from that all public leaders / figures / role - models who are authors, speakers, event sponsors, etc., commit themselves to public scrutiny and accountability.
I've had to delete some comments and issue a few warnings, but for the most part you've all been excellent
at keeping this
conversation civil.
WHO governance: The
conversation continues
Civil society meetings related to WHO EB142, 19 - 20 January 2018 Baby Milk Action is a member of the Geneva Global Health Hub G2H2 that was launched during a civil society side event at the 69th Wor
Civil society meetings related to WHO EB142, 19 - 20 January 2018 Baby Milk Action is a member of the Geneva Global Health Hub G2H2 that was launched during a
civil society side event at the 69th Wor
civil society side event
at the 69th World...
This article is based on
conversations with Catherine Barnard, professor of EU Law
at the University of Cambridge, Anand Menon, professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs
at King's College London and director of UK in a Changing Europe, Steve Peers, professor of EU, Human Rights and World Trade Law
at the University of Essex, Amy Porges, adviser and government representative on WTO negotiations and litigation and free trade agreements, John Springford, director of Research
at the Centre for European Reform and other politicians, trade negotiators,
civil servants and officials in London, Washington and Brussels who asked not to be named.
At 6 p.m., Sen. Liz Krueger will host a
conversation with New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, discussing his work to challenge Trump Administration policies on a host of issues from immigration to the environment to
civil and voting rights.
Participating in the
conversation were Russlynn Ali, assistant secretary for
civil rights
at the Department of Education; Joan Steitz, a molecular biophysicist
at Yale University who studies RNA; Shirley Malcom, head of the directorate for education and human resources
at AAAS; and Sara Seager, a planetary scientist and physicist
at MIT who studies the atmospheres of planets beyond the solar system.
Ethan, a tenth grader
at Jenkins High School who is in the production, says that since he began playing Marcus Garvey — an early - twentieth - century activist who inspired many U.S.
civil rights leaders — he has started to see the
civil rights movement pop up everywhere: on television, in
conversations, even in class.
An array of education leaders had a hard - hitting but remarkably
civil conversation about race and school reform
at AEI this week.
Perhaps most offensive of all, we equate the need for high stakes testing, and command - and - control policies, with the obligation to ensure the protection of the
civil rights for our most
at - risk children without any
conversation about the funding, or even more necessary, accountability for those holding others accountable.
Just let it go and have a
civil conversation and build alliances with folks who agree that the CO2 accumulation in atmosphere and oceans is a big problem and not engage too much (or
at all) with folks who seem to be having a bad day and want to grind an online axe to achieve internal tranquility.