Sentences with phrase «legitimate aims for»

The ECJ said that legitimate aims for the purpose of Art 6 had to have a public interest nature.
«The Court emphasized that respect for the conditions of «living together» was a legitimate aim for the measure at issue and that, particularly as the State had a lot of room for manoeuvre («a wide margin of appreciation») as regards this general policy question on which there were significant differences of opinion, the ban imposed by the Law of 11 October 2010 did not breach the Convention.»

Not exact matches

«[I aim to serve] people with a legitimate interest in using bitcoins, such as converting into euros a few bitcoins they've received or paying for an online service with bitcoins.»
William A. Simpson has said it well: «Denominational apparatus exists for the sake of legitimate, particularistic religious differentiation; social ministry aims at common justice.
Bill Steele, convener of the Church's Social Care Council explained to The Herald why the move had been made: «Having consulted widely and having sought employment law advice, the Council does not believe that the requirement for all care and support staff to be Christian is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim
BTW I'm not sure how realiable this is but the whispers around the club are that the MBappe bid was a legitimate bid, with the aim of being prepared for Sanchez leaving.
«However laudable the aim, we need to make sure that increasing access to government held information for those with a legitimate need to know does not also open the door to those who seek to buy, beguile or barter their way to information that is rightly denied to them in law.»
Edwin said: «It is therefore appalling that BUA Group in the midst of these overwhelming facts will still want the public to believe that Dangote Group is after its business when in actual fact BUA has been the one mining illegally in Dangote Mining Lease and attacking its officials without any justification... The crocodile tears being shed by BUA in its cry for help and open letter to the President is most laughable and a total distraction from BUA's continuous illegal activities within Dangote's ML 2541 aimed at depleting and exhausting the limestone reserves in order to sabotage Dangote Group's legitimate investment.»
His employer (Bryan Cranston, Contagion) aims to add racing to the Driver's resume, seeking finance from a local mobster (Albert Brooks, The In - Laws) for a legitimate venture.
After accessing a wealth of knowledge at the event, throughout Terms 3 and 4 students worked on personalised projects, aiming to design legitimate solutions for a niche within the problem.
But a careful reading of the standards for the English language arts suggests that the architects consciously designed them to allow for legitimate diversity of aims and breadth of content.
That ambitious plan is key to her broader aim of establishing Success as what the network describes as a «catalyst and national model for education reform efforts,» and a legitimate citywide competitor to the incumbent public school system.
Of course, our aim is to ensure legitimate information about saving money or fighting for consumer rights stays.
The AWC also aims to prevent the abuse, exploitation and suffering of captive birds, to address issues of rescue, placement, and sanctuary for displaced birds, to increase legal protections for captive birds and to support legitimate conservation programs aimed at preserving birds» rightful place in the wild.
The same country that has made headlines for measuring Gross National Happiness (there are some legitimate questions for how GNH is calculated) and aiming for 100 % organic agriculture recently announcing a partnership with Nissan to supply electric vehicles (EVs) to government and taxi fleets, as well as electric vehicle chargers, as part of a broad scale effort to cut fossil fuel imports by a whopping 70 %, eventually aiming to become a zero emissions nation.
The test to determine discriminatory conduct, in this case direct age discrimination, is set out in reg 3 of the Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006 (SI 2006/1031)(which is now repealed and set out in s 13 (1) and (2) of the Equality Act 2010): «For the purposes of these Regulations, a person («A») discriminates against another person («B») if, on the grounds of B's age, A treats B less favourably than he treats or would treat other persons,... and A can not show the treatment or, as the case may be, provision, criterion or practice to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim
Although councils set out legitimate fine systems, so that driving and parking can be managed in the most efficient and fair way for all drivers, increasing fines to these profits extremes raises some questions in regards to the aim of said systems.
There are places where killing people for religious or political aims is not considered terrorism but legitimate political action.»
On the facts, the Tribunal held that in specifying that a) staff of both genders be available, b) staff left in charge should have sufficient experience, and c) there should be continuity of care wherever possible, the Respondent's aim was legitimate, and that requiring staff to work Sunday shifts in line with their contracts was a proportionate means of achieving that aim, and dismissed Mrs Mba's claim for constructive dismissal.
The legitimate aim it pursued was that of providing suitable adoptive parents for a significant number of children who would otherwise go unprovided for.
An interference would be considered «necessary in a democratic society» for a legitimate aim if it answered a «pressing social need» and, in particular, if it was proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued and if the reasons adduced by the national authorities to justify it were «relevant and sufficient».
The AG then considered that whereas the aims of the measure restricting the free movement, namely the distribution of the budgetary burden in order to prevent social tension and its negative consequences for integration, constitute in themselves legitimate objectives, the AG finds that with regard to the distribution of the budgetary burden there are less restrictive measures that would enable the evening out of budgetary imbalances across a State.
However, if a dress code appears to discriminatory, an employer will not be liable if they can show that the requirements are a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim and there is case law which demonstrates that having different dress codes for men and women is not automatically discriminatory.
Four issues had been identified by the parties: (i) whether the Court of Appeal had correctly held that the 2009 and 2010 care plan reviews were to be read as including a reassessment of the claimant's community care needs; (ii) whether the authority's decision to provide pads interfered with the claimant's Art 8 rights and, if so, whether such an interference was justified and proportionate; (iii) whether the authority had been operating any relevant policy or practice for the purposes of s 21E (1) of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (DDA 1995) and, if so, whether that policy was justified as a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim, namely the equitable allocation of limited care resources; and (iv) whether the authority had failed to have due regard to the needs specified in s 49A of DDA 1995 (the general disability equality duty) when carrying out their functions in the instant case.
However, the EAT found that the ET judge had «failed to consider whether, in the context of the FPS, the application of the transitional provisions and the differential treatment on the grounds of age was a proportionate means for achieving what she had concluded... were legitimate aims of social policy».
This opinion is interesting as it confirms that, the need for political and religious neutrality can be a legitimate aim under the Framework Directive and may therefore justify direct discrimination (if indeed, this policy was discriminatory in the first place).
It concluded that ``... the wish to reward night - time working was, for our purposes, a legitimate aim and the 24/7 requirement corresponded with that aim
They won before the tribunal (potentially at great financial cost to the union), but then the EAT allowed the union's appeal by a whisker, holding that there was indeed indirect discrimination in the union sacrificing certain (female) members» full legal rights for the greater good of job protection and pay protection for other members but that it was justified — the union's «greater good» argument was a legitimate aim and (more controversially) its means were proportionate, even though it had been distinctly «hard» in its treatment of the refusenik members.
Thus, the use of the scoring matrix which did not give special recognition to 24/7 working or providing special priority payments to those who were excused from 24/7 working for childcare reasons was not a means of achieving the chief constable's legitimate aim.
The report argues that the apparently objective aim of ensuring accountability should not be used as a subterfuge for failing to address the legitimate and clearly expressed aspirations of Indigenous people.
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