The object clause for this measure
enables special measures to be taken for the purpose of promoting food security for certain Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory.
As explained above, the NTNER Act now provides that the object of the statutory provisions regarding the five - year leases is to
enable special measures to be undertaken.
Section 30A of the NTNER Act now provides that the object of Part 4 of the NTNER Act is to
enable special measures to be taken to:
The Government Welfare Reform Bill states that the object of the alcohol restriction measure is to
enable special measures to be taken to reduce alcohol - related harm in Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory.
Not exact matches
Sir James Munby suggests that this can be achieved by introducing
special measures to
enable children to attend court (physical participation) and to allow children to communicate their feelings and wishes to the court (intellectual participation).
With refugee claims increasing in recent months, the proposed
special measures would
enable the government to improve efficiency in the system, at a critical juncture: it's a win - win for individuals who have been affected, and for the system as a whole.
Where the basis of the implementation of a
special measure is to redress the inequalities created by past discriminatory practices and
enable Indigenous people to enjoy their human rights equally, the removal of such a
measure can only be justified where such equality has in fact been achieved.
The right to negotiate is thus not a «
special measure» - it is not a
measure temporarily adopted to
enable a disadvantaged sector to «catch - up» to the social and economic status of the rest of the community.
For example, it is likely that the model proposed by the Cape York Institute in its report From a hand out to a hand up contains the appropriate procedural guarantees and participatory requirements to
enable those proposed
measures to potentially be characterised as a
special measure and as consistent with the right to social security.