Her period in the department was marked
by much public debate about the future of television, about digital broadcasting and the structure and financing of the BBC.
Not exact matches
But as the
debate over well water and lake water escalates, it's become difficult to tell just how
much support there is for the Citizens proposal — and how
much of a role a Chicago
public relations firm hired
by Citizens is playing in the promotional effort.
Nor do I think (pace Ian & Nina Graham) that useful structural instabilities of the sort I've tried to identify, that the chances for real
debate are
much diminished
by the fact that Clegg and Cameron are both the products of Very Posh
Public Schools.
At the same time, more senior scholars, like Gene Glass, Hank Levin, David Berliner, and Kenneth Zeichner may have been given too
much credit
by the old ranking system for books and articles that were influential in the past but do not give them as
much of a
public presence in recent policy
debates.
By: Dr. Scott P. Ardoin, University of Georgia Across the last decade great emphasis and
much debate has surrounded the administration of state mandated (SM) tests in
public schools.
Changed votes
by two Board members over the approval of two Aspire charter schools at this week's Board meeting gave the
public a glimpse at a
much larger
debate over whether charter schools based in Los Angeles should be allowed to operate their special education programs through a partnership with a far - off district that costs...
The dramatic change to the publishing landscape brought about
by the mushrooming of self - publishing has led to concerns, with the editor of publishing news site Good e-Reader, Michael Kozlowski, saying there needs to be a
debate around what constitutes being an author, because «calling everyone authors who put words on a document and submits them to the
public devalues the word so
much, it makes it meaningless».
Instead, knowledge of a consensus over how
much we already know or a rough estimate of how long it will take to learn a greed deal more could very well lead to
public and political reactions quite different from those created
by a noisy, angry, and dichotomized
debate.
Obviously I can't tell for sure, but I think that the voting
public in the US wants a
much longer and more thorough
public debate before the US devotes resources to the policies advocated
by Gavin Schmidt, Alan Leshner, and James Hansen.
Much of the global warming
debate is perhaps best described as a constant outbidding
by frantic campaigners, producing a barrage of ever - more scary scenarios in an attempt to get the
public to accept their civilisation - changing proposals.
The international law question has already been authoritatively discussed in this journal, most recently
by Professor Greer and Dr Tsagourias (NLJ 2010 p475) I would respectfully suggest that the comparison in their last paragraph between Iraq and Kosovo is the key point, and in fact renders
much of the
public debate on Iraq (and indeed the Chilcott inquiry itself) misplaced.