Sentences with phrase «broader social rules»

Not exact matches

It should address both the particular nuances of the company's industry as well as its broader goals for social responsibility and should be concrete enough to serve as a guide for employees in a quandary without laying out rules for every situation that could arise.
Social movement unionism works with affiliates in worker's movements, women's movements, student movements, other human rights organizations to and integrates them into a broader network or popular front against injustice and exploitation by the ruling class.
It has evaded standard rule - making procedures designed to collect evidence and encourage public participation; ignored the Supreme Court's interpretation of Title IX; pressured schools to adopt disciplinary proceedings that deny due process to the accused; insisted upon a definition of sexual harassment so broad that it threatens free speech on campus; and created within colleges units dedicated to reeducating students on all matters sexual and on the dictates of «social justice.»
Parents generally arrived at their chosen school through a largely linear process that began with the ruling out of large segments of the broader educational market of schools (e.g. ruling out all traditional public schools based on prior negative experiences, ruling out the private sector due to financial constraints) followed by the identification of a particular school through the parent's social network of family, friends and work colleagues.
... the broader point is that every contract, every human agreement, is embedded in a much wider set of rules and social practices.
On the one hand, a broad reading of the State resources criterion is justified by the fact that Member States may feel tempted to assume a «private form» to evade the application of State aid rules; on the other hand, a narrow reading averts the risk of enabling the Commission to conduct «an inquiry on the basis of the Treaty alone into the entire social and economic life of Member States», as famously summarized by AG Jacobs in Viscido.
The ad hoc advisory opinions and actual disciplinary decisions widely used to address emerging technology and social media tend to give general guidance on application of existing rules to broad topics of social media use.
A three - judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at Richmond, Virginia, ruled in December in Liverman v. City of Petersburg, that the social media policy was too broad.
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