Sentences with phrase «by implication demanding»

That is, to the extent we as a society demand privacy, the more we are by implication demanding ever more closed gardens, with ever higher walls.

Not exact matches

While the case is expected to be appealed by either losing side, it will nevertheless have implications for the emerging class of on - demand services.
The underlying factors driving the strength of the loonie have implications on how the BoC responds; the BoC is more forgiving if a stronger dollar is driven by fundamentals (i.e. greater foreign demand for Canadian goods / services) rather than investment flows.
The implications of any price change depends upon whether that price change is being driven primarily by demand or by supply.
The problem, imo, is that well meaning folks are brainwashed (by the $ $ beneficiaries) to think that the old shorting rule was swell without realizing the full implications of the whole mechanism — it's duplicative nature, non-transparency, supply / demand self fulfilment, etc..
Even if part of this decline was driven by a heightened liquidity premium the implication is the same: it indicates an increased demand for highly liquid and safe assets which, in turn, implies less aggregate nominal spending.
He solved it, or got round it, in the way philosophers and scientists have always been obliged to do — by the use of neologisms and, at times, of elaborate, allusive formulations of words which make considerable demands on the reader if their full meaning and implications are to be grasped.
Commonwealth Environmental Water Portfolio Management Plan: Macquarie River Valley 2017 - 18 sets intentions for 2017 — 18 in a multi-year context by identifying the longer - term flow regime to meet environmental demands, documenting what has occurred in the previous three years and considering the implications of 2017 — 18 intentions for demands in future years.
Commonwealth Environmental Water Portfolio Management Plan: Lachlan River 2017 - 18 sets intentions for 2017 - 18 in a multi-year context by identifying the longer - term flow regime to meet environmental demands, documenting what has occurred in the previous three years and considering the implications of 2017 - 18 intentions for demands in future years.
Commonwealth Environmental Water Portfolio Management Plan: Northern Unregulated Rivers 2017 - 18 identifies intentions for use in 2017 ‑ 18 in a multi-year context by identifying the longer - term flow regime to meet environmental demands, documenting what has occurred in previous years and considering the implications of 2017 ‑ 18 intentions for demands in future years.
Mr MacAskill's decision to ignore their demands is being viewed, in terms of its international implications, as one of the biggest decisions made by the devolved administration.
In a companion essay, he explores the implications of the arguments advanced by Teitelbaum and Butz, asking what it will take to create the demand necessary to employ the increasing numbers of young scientists that are already stuck in the postdoctoral holding pattern.
The most significant finding of a recent study considered by the Ethical, Legal and Social Implications Group of the US Human Genome Project was the lack of demand for testing: people don't want it (New Scientist, 18 September).
Influenza remains a major health problem in the United States, resulting each year in an estimated 36,000 deaths and 200,000 hospitalizations.4 Those who have been shown to be at high risk for the complications of influenza infection are children 6 to 23 months of age; healthy persons 65 years of age or older; adults and children with chronic diseases, including asthma, heart and lung disease, and diabetes; residents of nursing homes and other long - term care facilities; and pregnant women.4 It is for this reason that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recommended that these groups, together with health care workers and others with direct patient - care responsibilities, should be given priority for influenza vaccination this season in the face of the current shortage.1 Other high - priority groups include children and teenagers 6 months to 18 years of age whose underlying medical condition requires the daily use of aspirin and household members and out - of - home caregivers of infants less than 6 months old.1 Hence, in the case of vaccine shortages resulting either from the unanticipated loss of expected supplies or from the emergence of greater - than - expected global influenza activity — such as pandemic influenza, which would prompt a greater demand for vaccination5 — the capability of extending existing vaccine supplies by using alternative routes of vaccination that would require smaller doses could have important public health implications.
At CONTEC on October 8, Hugh Howey and his agent Kristin Nelson will be joined in our special session on self - publishing and its implications for the industry by colleagues including Peter Armstrong of Leanpub; Amanda Barbara of Pubslush; Jon Fine of Amazon; Jonny Geller of Curtis Brown; Florian Geuppert of Books on Demand; journalist Matthias Matting; and Michael Tamblyn of Kobo.
Our emphasis has been on the risk posed to asset prices by relatively demanding valuations in many asset classes and the risks posed by rising inflation pressure and the implications of this for medium - term central bank accommodation.
My policy implication is to move assets out of export - driven sectors, and those driven by China demand.
Oil will become constrained by the level of demand allowed under CO2 emission limits and this will have implications for the behaviour of countries, companies and consumers alike.
Chevron seems to acknowledge that in a two - degrees demand scenario, oil demand might have gone ex-growth by 2035, but does not discuss the implications of that crucial development.
Whether it has evaluated the market risk (i.e., price implications) from secular demand destruction for its commodities, as suggested by most 2 °C scenarios; and
The first, is a major focus on mapping out the implications of the energy transition involved for key stakeholders, with a focus on coal, oil and gas sectors, on capital expenditure by companies and scenario planning around demand and supply.
A Breakthrough analysis found that rebound effects as high as 60 percent (the IEA's high - end scenario) will have significant implications for global climate mitigation efforts, requiring as much as 13 percent more clean energy supply by 2035 to meet higher global energy demand — equivalent to the total energy consumption of 19 Australias.
Even small diversions of corn supplies to ethanol could have dramatic implications for the world's poor, especially considering that researchers believe that food production will need to triple by the year 2050 to accommodate expected demand.
The report highlights: Trends in domestic energy demand and supply prospects to 2040, broken down by fuel and sector The outlook for the power sector and the increasing share of coal in the region's electricity generation The role that Southeast Asia will play in international energy trade and the implications for its energy expenditures The potential energy and environmental benefits of implementing pragmatic measures that would help limit the rise in the region's greenhouse - gas emissions An in - depth analysis of energy prospects in Malaysia to 2040 A focus on four key issues that will shape the direction of the region's energy system: power grid interconnection, energy investment, energy access and fossil - fuel subsidies
The implication for expensive, high risk and high carbon fuels such as Canadian tar sands is that over the long haul, in a world that is responding to climate change, neither price nor demand will support the rapid growth that is currently planned for by industry and the Canadian government.
Still: educating the world about open adoption is a different goal than selling an agency's services, and if an available child's image is used to profit another person or business, then the ethical implications demand closer review, as suggested by the pending State Department standards change.
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