Sentences with phrase «called global affairs»

«That reading is rendered more plausible given that the foreign affairs department (now called Global Affairs) undertook no consultations with the ORF's advisory committee....

Not exact matches

«From time to time, I will get called by the director general of export controls at Global Affairs Canada, asking for my feedback regarding a policy issue.
John Kirton, co-director of the G - 20 Research Group at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs, called the summit a «very solid success,» pointing to broad agreement on the agenda, much of it focusing on less controversial issues such as women's empowerment and promoting digitalization.
«We will be profitable, as measured by EBITDA,» said Chris Lehane, global head of policy and public affairs, in a conference call.
Here's what Pete says: Mr. Obama's speech was not a call to unity; it was a summons to his liberal base to fight — on global warming, for gay rights, for gun control, for renewable energy, and for a diminished American role in world affairs.
, who was undersecretary of state for global affairs under President Clinton and is the vice chairman of the U.N. Foundation, called the announcement «the political breakthrough we've been waiting for.»
In an advisory to bloggers entitled «Global Warming: Fact of Fiction [sic],» an Army public affairs official promoted a conference call with West about «the causes of global warming, and how it may not be caused by the common indicates [sic] some scientists and the media are indicating.&Global Warming: Fact of Fiction [sic],» an Army public affairs official promoted a conference call with West about «the causes of global warming, and how it may not be caused by the common indicates [sic] some scientists and the media are indicating.&global warming, and how it may not be caused by the common indicates [sic] some scientists and the media are indicating.»
The most compelling assessment of the human and security implications of our failure to deal with global warming is set out by in a new book, published this month, called Climate Wars written by the highly respected international affairs and military analyst Gwynne Dyer.
Martin Zimmerman, vice president of governmental affairs for Ford, said in a conference call Yesterday that the Kyoto agreement sets an unrealistic timetable for reducing emissions of gases linked to global warming, and excludes developing nations where such emissions are likely to increase.
Whereas although the Convention, approved by the United States Senate, called on all signatory parties to adopt policies and programs aimed at limiting their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, in July 1996 the Undersecretary of State for Global Affairs called for the first time for «legally binding» emission limitation targets and timetables for Annex I Parties, a position reiterated by the Secretary of State in testimony before the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate on January 8, 1997;
They include Paulette Brown of Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge, who co-authored the landmark 2006 report, Visible Invisibility: Women of Color in Law Firms; R. Ted Cruz of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, the first Hispanic to be Texas solicitor general and author of more than 70 Supreme Court briefs; John W. Daniels of Quarles & Brady, one of the first African - Americans to lead a top U.S. firm; Keith M. Harper of Kilpatrick Stockton, a Cherokee who heads his firm's Native American affairs practice group; Patricia Menendez - Cambo, co-chair of Greenberg Traurig's global practice group; General Mills GC Roderick A. Palmore, who, as GC at Sara Lee, spearheaded the Call to Action urging corporate law firms to diversify; and Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the ACLU.
The first article by the UN High Representative for Disarmament Affairs on what she says «many now call killer robots,» a challenge requiring «some global standards.»
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