Sentences with phrase «effective deterrent in»

Start feeding garlic one month before the start of flea season and you'll find it's an effective deterrent in your flea prevention tool kit.
«Year - in and year - out, speed cameras have proven to be an effective deterrent in combating speeding violations and curbing reckless behavior in work zones,» said AAA Mid-Atlantic spokesman John Townsend.
Keeping the Trident nuclear weapons system would act as an effective deterrent in preventing threats to UK security, Sir Menzies Campbell has said.
This power of exposure is a far more effective deterrent in many countries, including our own, than the court systems that deliver judgment and not necessarily justice.
«We await the recommendations of the Committee but it is a clear that there is a fine line that needs to be drawn between the right to Freedom of Expression under Article 10 of the ECHR and the creation of regulatory or statutory protection to ensure that there are effective deterrents in place to stop the influx of inaccurate news stories that are invading our news feeds.»

Not exact matches

A powerful military deterrent and a resolve to pursue effective diplomacy can prevent war on the Korean peninsula, preserve the lives of the millions living in Seoul (and probably tens of thousands of American service members), and secure American vital national interests in Asia.
Guns are very effective deterrents, and given that 99.9996 % of gun owners don't go out and kill anyone with guns (that's, 35000 murders (assuming one murder per gun owner, which is a generous number, divided by 100m gun owners, which own about 270m guns in the US), it's mind numbingly stupid to argue that GUNS are the problem, or that even legal gun owners are the problem, when you're more likely to get run over by a car (and 13 times more likely to just die of cancer).
A number of reasons have been advanced to justify the introduction of criminal sanctions for this type of conduct, the most common of which are that it would bring Australia in line with other competition regimes and that criminal sanctions are more likely to provide an effective deterrent.
The new punishments might still hurt future players somewhat, but they'll be a more effective deterrent against further chicanery, and they'll probably result in house - cleaning at penalized schools.
A nightlight also makes an effective monster deterrent and can help her reorient herself if she wakes up in the wee hours.
Some continue the habit longer, but peer pressure in school is often a very effective deterrent.
Although the policy has been covert, the failure to accommodate extra traffic has been an effective and successful deterrent to growth of car use, which indeed has barely increased in the past decade.
Labour will rightly continue to scrutinise sources of evidence to ensure the deterrent is delivered in the most cost - effective and strategic way.»
The previous draft wording indicating Labour would proceed with Trident replacement (i.e. that Labour would «ensure the deterrent is delivered in the most cost - effective and strategic way «-RRB- was removed.
In other words, the presence of a green crab was as effective a deterrent to sesarma herbivory as actual attacks by green crabs.
«There is no doubt in our minds,» Naveen wrote to the DA just days before the statute of limitations expired in late 2011, «that criminal prosecution, against the university and the professor, will be the single most effective deterrent to unsafe laboratory conditions in the future at UCLA, and at other universities.»
In a study published on October 9 in the open access journal PeerJ, Dr Olle Håstad at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and Dr Anders Ödeen at Uppsala University show that ultraviolet window markings indeed have the potential to be effective deterrentIn a study published on October 9 in the open access journal PeerJ, Dr Olle Håstad at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and Dr Anders Ödeen at Uppsala University show that ultraviolet window markings indeed have the potential to be effective deterrentin the open access journal PeerJ, Dr Olle Håstad at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and Dr Anders Ödeen at Uppsala University show that ultraviolet window markings indeed have the potential to be effective deterrents.
Livermore's expertise in high - energy - density science, high - performance computing, and nuclear and isotopic science, combined with unique research facilities, meet the formidable technical challenges of ensuring that the nuclear deterrent remains effective.
Despite repeated calls for educators to get more instructional mileage out of the assessment data they have at hand, two deterrents typically stand in the way of most educators» effective use of test data.
Lumpathumps make perfect deterrents and are especially effective in warding off young humans.
This can mean a combination of two strategies — using humane outside motion sensor cat deterrents (Cat Stop and The Scarecrow by Contech are very effective) and blocking certain windows in your home so your cat can not see outside cats where motion sensor deterrents may not reach.
Some pet owners instead rely upon deterrents that give the dogs feces a foul taste or smell; however, this is not always as effective since it can not be administrated to all animals that defecate in the vicinity of the dog.
You must «catch her in the act» for the deterrent to be effective; it will not work if it is a moment too late.
Plastic bases for compost bins are available commercially and are a further deterrent, but it is more effective to wrap wire mesh around the bottom and underneath the compost bin to prevent rats getting in (but still allowing worms to enter the compost bin and providing drainage).
It may be too soon to tell whether Kenya's harsher penalties will prove an effective deterrent, but it certainly is a step in the right direction and hopefully a model for other nations to follow.
While this particular deterrent was once an effective tool in restraining the publication of private information, the advent of the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA 1998) and recent case law have resulted in the subrogation of privacy in favour of the freedom of an increasingly powerful press.
The imprescriptibility sanctioned by Article 29 of the Rome Statute is the logical legal corollary to the prohibition of impunity and essential in the implementation phase of measures «to be taken -LSB-...] which shall act as a deterrent and be such as to afford effective protection in the Member States, and in all the Union's institutions, bodies, offices and agencie» in accordance with Article 325 TFEU on which the EU sanctions system to counter fraud affecting the financial interests of the Union is based.
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