Not exact matches
The platform planks for «32 embodied a number of Century concerns: U.S. adherence to the World Court protocol; U.S. entry into the League of Nations, provided that its covenant be amended to eliminate military sanctions; U.S. recognition of the Soviet Union (which was granted a year later); the safeguarding of the rights of conscientious objectors (including those denied citizenship, such as Canadian - born theologian D. C. Macintosh of Yale Divinity School); the abolition of compulsory military training in state - supported educational
institutions other than military and naval academies; emergency measures for relief and public - works employment; the securing of constitutional rights for minorities; the reduction of gross inequality of income
by steeply progressive rates of taxation on
large incomes; «progressive socialization of the ownership and
control of natural resources, public utilities and basic industries»; «the nationalization of our entire banking system»; and so on (June 8, 1932).
On the contrary, the strength of the enforcement devices, the clerical and moralistic character of the legal approach at
large, the duty of disclosure, the close
control exercised
by the community upon the individual and upon the law, if compared with the analogous legal
institutions of the Latin countries, seem to disclose rather a more collectivistic than a more individualistic character of the common - law system....
TRAC is a
large multi-centre collaboration coordinated
by Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit (MORU) in Bangkok, and comprises a range of research
institutions as well as National Malaria
Control Programmes and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Beginning in 2015, a coalition of research and education
institutions will launch a
large - scale, randomized
controlled trial evaluation of principal professional development funded
by the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences.
Too many of the media
institutions are
controlled by holding companies with
large interests in fossil fuels — hence, the real solution to the problem might be something like antitrust regulations for media corporations.
We have represented
large domestic and foreign financial
institutions and other companies in connection with some of the most prominent enforcement matters brought
by U.S. financial regulators, the Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC), the Department of Justice and the SEC, involving sanctions, anti-money laundering and anticorruption issues.
Corporate and government law offices may be accustomed to the compliance and reporting required
by their parent organizations, however, they do not have
control over the broad and sweeping changes so often associated with
larger institutions today.