Not exact matches
The
global apparel industry that I hail from has built up a particularly long
history of attempting to address
concerns from civil society, organized labour and governments about the industry's negative social and environmental impacts.
The negative effect of the National Council of Churches needs to be understood in relation to the
history of the NCC itself, especially the extent to which it was modeled after the United Nations and was prompted by an interest in
global religious
concerns.
Beyond such deception and mischaracterization with regard to specific episodes in
history and international relations, education in its current form is woefully inadequate
concerning certain types of information crucial to
global coexistence.
With
global temperatures on a steady rise, Tormey is
concerned that
history will repeat itself on volcanoes all over the world.
In a world that needs to be saved from
history's» effects like war,
global warming, poverty, religion's ideology, hyper - consumption, etc.... Today's education (both classroom and beyond the classroom) has to be able to shape
concerned individuals who can learn from human
history and be more innovative than the box allows them, to be.
DAVID ADJAYE, «Making Place: The Architecture of David Adjaye» @ The Art Institute of Chicago Chicago «Making Place» is the first comprehensive museum survey of
global architect David Adjaye «s portfolio of more than 50 built projects, which includes the forthcoming National Museum of African American
History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.. His approach to design is unique: «Rather than advancing a signature architectural style, Adjaye's structures address local
concerns and conditions through both a historical understanding of context and a
global understanding of modernism.»
There is a long
history concerning the technology - centric approach to solving
global warming — one that the authors of these three books are either unaware of or attempting to whitewash.
This investigation is not
concerned with naval
history but with
global warming, respectively climate changes.
In his story looking into the implications of new scientific findings
concerning the potential impacts of ocean circulation variability on our understanding of the behavior the
global average surface
history (parts of which we described in our last post), Revkin interviewed four prominent climate researchers.
Very much of the same view is that famously nice, caring natural
history TV presenter David Attenborough,
concerned environmentalist the Hon Sir Jonathon Porritt, actress Susan Hampshire, Gaia theory inventor James Lovelock, ex UN apparatchik Sir Crispin Tickell (the man who — briefly — persuaded Margaret Thatcher of the imminent perils of Man Made
Global Warming) and chimp expert Jane Goodall.