Sentences with phrase «kind of population control»

Not exact matches

Some success seems likely with population control, arms control, and some kind of moderately stable international security arrangements, though probably not a «world government.»
Because the resources of the earth are finite, there will necessarily be population control of some kind.
It certainly is ironic that, while the gold standard of medical research is the randomized controlled trial, which generally looks at the risks and benefits of an intervention on a population level, it is individual women who have to make the decisions — and individual women may not always find these kind of data helpful.
An experiment to control Staten Island's booming deer population through mass vasectomies is said to be the first of its kind in the nation.
In 1993, while Sladek was still battling for control of the local grid, some 100 miles to the northeast in Bavaria, Hans - Josef Fell was orchestrating a different kind of energy overhaul as a member of the town council of Hammelburg (population 12,000), his hometown.
The study explains that if the elites of a city had control over a resource, they presumably had some kind of control over the populations that obtained and manually transported it.
Family studies, case - control studies, and population cohorts are picking up this kind of signal everywhere.
There are lots of technical challenges to making this approach work, and some issues about whether it's really a good idea to release lots of extra toads to control local populations, and so forth - but we suspect that it's worth following up this kind of research.
We absolutely love puppies and dogs of all kinds, but also believe that there are currently too many who end up in shelter situations and euthanized because of failures to control the pet population.
(I acknowledge that I have relatives who see population control as meaning more White babies and less of any other kind.
(or one of the kinder, more compassionate solutions anyway) Beyond the obvious religious implications inherent in a discussion like this, what would be the scientific, pragmatic, emergency related mandate on curbing human population outside of voluntary birth control?
Although the Supreme Court of Canada held in Christie that a «general access to legal services in relation to court and tribunal proceedings dealing with rights and obligations» is not a fundamental aspect of the rule of law (see paras. 23 - 27), it does not follow that the legal profession can preserve its monopoly over legal services free from government regulation or control of any kind, even when, as now, it has made legal services unavailable at reasonable cost to a large majority of the population.
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