Sentences with phrase «fairness argument as»

First, there's a fairness argument as between the students.
The irony is that Labour in Britain has last week been attacked in absurd, lurid terms over «class war» for making the same fairness argument as Obama.

Not exact matches

Now, you may or may not find that to be a persuasive argument about the state of income inequality in Canada — as our own Chris MacDonald has pointed out, determining the fairness of CEO pay is more complicated than it seems.
The SAPERE's Philosophy 4 Children (P4C) sessions include stimuli such as a short video clip or story to prompt structured discussions around topics like truth, knowledge and fairness, with the aim of helping children to become more willing and able to ask questions, construct arguments and engage in reasoned discussion.
All along Amazon has cloaked the argument as a moral issue of consumer fairness — its practically a straw man for them to point and guide attention away from their own culpability.
Here you need to rely on the «fairness argument», focusing on the problems charges have caused you, as the Ombudsman has said it is unlikely to consider «templated arguments».
Residents at risk need merely make the same arguments as the climate alarmists re: the precautionary principle and «fairness» — with «geographical» rather than «generational» arguments (that is: «your neighbor's lives will be ruined» rather than «your children's lives will be ruined»)
In Z, Moor J adopted the negative fairness test and held as follows: «I therefore reject all the arguments raised to say that it would not be fair for me to uphold the agreement in so far as it excludes sharing.
In the same book, Farrow makes a number of arguments against what he refers to as the privatization of civil justice, such as the impoverishment of common law when cases are removed from the public system (this dovetails with Simpson's work), the use of a private (thus, confidential) system to circumvent public policies, public accountability, and basic notions of procedural fairness, and the shielding from the public of transactions that would not withstand public scrutiny.
You can also raise the argument that s. 6 (3) of the Arbitration Act (the equality term) is engaged here as well, since your argument is that a failure to sufficiently screen for power balances goes to the root of a concern for equality and fairness between the parties.
For the sake of argument, we'll define ethics as the well - founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe what humans ought to do in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues; the study and development of one's standards and beliefs to ensure they're reasonable and well - founded; and striving to ensure that we, and the institutions we help to shape, live up to standards that are reasonable and solidly - based.
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