Sentences with phrase «dudgeon have»

Leading Indigenous health experts Professors Tom Calma and Pat Dudgeon have also urged primary health networks to partner with Indigenous communities in the work of suicide prevention, given that the PHNs are receiving funding allocated under the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Strategy.
But those in high dudgeon have to come to grips with reality — this is what happens when scientists and institutions debase the coin of the realm.
This provides a clear schism between the case law of the Strasbourg Court, which not only identified an unjustifiable interference with article 8 on the basis of «sanctions», as relied on by the Court in these proceedings (para. 58), but more importantly, found the «mere existence of such laws to be an infringement of Article 8» [Dudgeon v UK, Norris v Ireland and Modinos v Cyprus].
MR JUSTICE EADY: There was a considerable body of jurisprudence in Strasbourg and elsewhere which recognised that sexual activity engaged the rights protected by Art 8 (see Dudgeon v UK (1981) 4 EHRR 149).

Not exact matches

When InBev asked candidate firms how much extra work they'd be willing to do without compensation and how much longer than the company's already astonishing 120 - day payment terms agencies would be willing to wait for their money, the ad biz was in high dudgeon.
Statoil says that the final turbine on its Dudgeon field in England has been installed and the company is «well on its way» to providing over 1 million homes in Europe with renewable electricity.
Critics exploded in high dudgeon because he wrote to one priest who was apparently guilty of serial abuses that his ministry had been a blessing to «many people.»
Asking people to join is great, but if you have a full - scale legislative action module, it's even better to have an action alert posted — people are on a page because they're interested in the subject, so a standing alert (i.e., a link that impells them to «Tell Congress to Stamp Out Blue Fizzies») lets you catch them when they're in high dudgeon.
These days, we get Henry Porter writing about how he refused to eat in a curry house that happened to be within the same postcode as a CCTV camera, and stormed out in high dudgeon, scattering onion bhajis and asking outraged rhetorical questions about whether Magna Carta had died in vain in his wake.
In high dudgeon, the GMB have cut the affiliation fee paid to Labour from # 1.2 m to # 150,000.
But Republican Rob Astorino's campaign has been strangely ineffective, because it takes the same tone of high dudgeon on Moreland that it took on fake scandals (remember the attacks on Cuomo's tax assessment?).
In one typical proposal, the Dudgeon Point expansion, the North Queensland Bulk Ports Corp. has proposed to dredge 13 million cubic meters of sediment and dispose of it inside the Marine Park.
Lady Bird will quit the club in high dudgeon when she's overlooked for all the main parts in a production of Shakespeare's Tempest, but meanwhile has found a boyfriend in Danny (Lucas Hedges), a sweet young man who tells her he respects her too much to touch her breasts.
When we last left Bilbo, Thorin and the company of dwarves at the end of Hobbit 2, they had succeeded in severely hacking off Smaug the Dragon, who set off in high dudgeon to torch the nearest human settlement.
To me this is obvious, but I've learned to include this sort of disclaimer to make it marginally more difficult for dodgers, denialists, and dudgeon demons to avoid actual thought in favor of straw man arguments and other mischaracterizations of what I've actually said.
If for example someone omitted a required disclosure, or several, but was otherwise respected (and even maybe favored by people like us RealClimate readers, however you define and measure that), that would be a nice case to test the appropriate degree of dudgeon.
UK Approves 1.14 GW of New Offshore Wind Power Projects Reuters reports that two new massive wind power projects have been approved by the UK government: the 580 MW Race Banks project, and the 560 MW Dudgeon, both off the coast of Norfolk.
Unfortunately, the Court's mis - direction on the judicial reasoning protecting private life rights and sexual identity started by Dudgeon, is a shortcoming of the judgment, as the Court fails to engage with the impact that mere criminalisation has on gay and lesbian individuals, even without enforcement.
The pair has advised on the financing for the 402MW Dudgeon Offshore Wind Farm, which is due to be built 20 miles off the north Norfolk coast.
To explain the meaning of suicides in communities, Professor Dudgeon draws on an analogy used by Professor Michael Chandler, who has worked with First Nation Peoples in Canada to understand youth suicide and self harm — that «suicide is like the miner's canary».
With World Suicide Prevention Day approaching on 10 September, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Evaluation Project (ATSISPEP), headed by Australian University Chancellor Professor Tom Calma and Indigenous Mental Health Commissioner Pat Dudgeon, have issued the statement below calling for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicide rates, which are among the highest in the world, to become a national priority and subject to a national inquiry or Royal Commission.
The ATSISPEP team leaders — Indigenous National Mental Health Commissioner Professor Pat Dudgeon, Professor Jill Milroy, Dean of the School of Indigenous Studies at the University of Western Australia, and Professor Tom Calma, Expert Adviser and Convener of the ATSISPEP National Advisory Committee — said they hope the Federal Government agrees they have placed Indigenous suicide prevention activity «on a firm foundation» through the report which:
Pat Dudgeon: In ten years time, the strategy has been successful if the community in its broad sense has been well resourced to implement it.
Professor Pat Dudgeon, project leader of the ATSISPEP, alongside Adele Cox and others, has developed the National Empowerment Project — an Indigenous - led suicide prevention project — through the University of Western Australia and with local Aboriginal partnership organisations across the country since 2012.
Professor Pat Dudgeon, a Fellow of the APS and Australia's first Aboriginal psychologist, has described the apology as «a tremendous moment for Australian psychology».
In a timely publication, Indigenous mental health leaders Pat Dudgeon, Tom Calma, and Abigail Bray have urged this week for new approaches to address the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mental health gap, saying:.
University of Canberra Chancellor Professor Tom Calma said the ATSISPEP team had conducted the wide - ranging evaluation of the effectiveness of existing suicide prevention services and programs under the stewardship of Indigenous National Mental Health Commissioner Professor Pat Dudgeon.
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