Sentences with phrase «frame policy problems»

Increasingly, the social sciences frame policy problems from the financial system to the food system as complex adaptive systems (CAS) and urge policy - makers to design legal solutions with CAS properties in mind.

Not exact matches

It seems to me that what needs to be reassessed are the goals of UK's immigration policy and that yet another restructuring of the UKBA can do little to solve the problems that political parties are creating by failing to understand and approach international human mobility outside the limited frame of securitisation and under the duress of looming (tabloid - fed) moral panic.
While framing the problem as a question of terrorist financing has helped to garner additional policy resources and international attention, it has been sold as a win - win for environmentalists and counter-terrorists alike.
Our point is that the IPCC has bought into a very specific framing of «the problem» that has rendered climate policy ineffective and has foreclosed the possibility of public consent.
However, if climate change is understood as essentially a moral and ethical problem it will eventually transform how climate change is debated because the successful framing by the opponents of climate change policies that have limited recent debate to these three arguments, namely cost, scientific uncertainty, and unfairness of reducing ghg emissions until China does so can be shown to be deeply ethically and morally problematic.
Common to these arguments is that they have successfully framed the climate change debate so that opponents and proponents of climate policies debate facts about costs, scientific uncertainty, or economic harms to nations that act while other large emitters don't act rather the moral problems with these arguments.
I don't have any problem with the fact that there are many time frames over which atmospheric CO2 would respond if emissions were to stop, though I think there is far more uncertainty in the estimates of response over time than is usually acknowledged, and that people with «agendas» consistently discount the response times that do not support their policy positions.
Scientific and economic reasoning is an adequate way to frame the climate problem — but it is by no means the only way, says Matthew Nisbet, a communication and policy specialist at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
This talk will address the problem of how evidence is excluded in science policy debates and the difficulty that arguments from outside the conventional framing of issues have in being «heard» in a policy context.
The framing of the climate change problem by the UNFCCC / IPCC and the early articulation of a preferred policy option by the UNFCCC has arguably marginalized research on broader issues surrounding climate variability and change, resulting in an overconfident assessment of the importance of greenhouse gases in future climate change and stifling the development of a broader range of policy options.
If you have had legal problems and can not qualify for life insurance, for a certain time frame, then an Accidental Death Policy would also be a good consideration until such time when you can qualify for a standard life insurance plan.
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