It was then that the day - to - day reality of the tension between
competing interests of our two careers and parenting responsibilities hit home.
While these institutions must take into account and
balance competing interests in society, they can not be captured by particular interests.
Dual agency is when a licensee represents two or more parties with
competing interests in a trade in real estate, such as both buyer and seller, or two or more competing buyers.
However, part of the challenge in their work, the presenters said, is education often struggles
with competing interests.
Before setting out these conditions the court acknowledged that it was balancing two
competing interests at this stage.
It is never easy to achieve change in big, resistant bureaucratic organisations driven
by competing interests and agendas.
The normal process of checks and balances
among competing interest groups, however, has failed when it comes to education.
This post describes a potential collision of this renewable energy future with the reality of today's
often competing interests.
This is when you begin to uncover unseen factors, such
as competing interests, politics, or prior experiences with your company or a similar company.
Those are a lot of
competing interests for a starting salary, to be sure, but it is doable if they keep their financial priorities where they belong.
They are professionals who are trained to present their client's case in the best light and agree to hold client information confidential
from competing interests.
However, a different analysis should apply to historic contamination in the context of civil remedies, the enduring common law struggle to
reconcile competing interests and principles.
With
several competing interests to consider, employers in the hospitality industry should consult with counsel to establish appropriate policies.
To be valuable, the research had to address the often -
competing interests of legislators and various public constituencies (teachers, parents, superintendents, and others).
Emergency funds are tough to build because there are so
many competing interests and you don't want to have all that cash laying around not making any meaningful return.
Different jurisdictions have different ways of doing this, which may reflect different weights being given to
competing interests in each jurisdiction.
How to consolidate these two
often competing interests and through which procedures will remain one of the difficult tasks during the months to come.
As long as they are legal clauses, they can be used to help control how the business is run between various shareholders
with competing interests.
They are professionals who are trained to present their client's case in the best light and agree to hold client information confidential
from competing interests.
There is no indication of how the proposed sale might affect future public access, or how land use will be balanced
among competing interests.
Our Court admonished, «The judge is required to
weigh competing interests to ensure the truth of a matter is brought to light and justice to all parties before the court is served.»
But with the many communities and
competing interests involved, the plan has also set off a debate on subjects including climate change, property taxes and the importance of muskrats.
Normally, a bill like this would put the Cuomo administration in a bind, forcing a decision
between competing interests for a finite pot of Medicaid money.
So how should universities approach with balancing
competing interests on campus, ensuring their activities are as compliant with the Charter as possible?
«Because it is public, performance is a site of struggle
where competing interests intersect, and different viewpoints and voices get articulated» (Conquergood 1989, 84).
Greg Harvey developed a string of flour mills across south - east Asia while balancing the
sometimes competing interests of an Indonesian billionaire and a co-operative controlled by West Australian farmers.
In my view, the present approach provides adequate room for a proper balancing of the important
competing interests which must be considered in a case in which the state seeks to compel production of material from the media.
Mostly, the lobbying is about
competing interests within a country rather than a country's interests as a whole (think the interest of an industry manufacturing an expensive something vs. lower prices for everybody).
The state is at the service of civil society and arises from it since, inevitably, there are clashes of interests at a civil level which need an authority to provide binding policies and laws to fairly
resolve competing interests.
No doubt his political opponents will charge that more decisive leadership on Hein's part, a bringing together of
competing interests under executive aegis rather than a protracted controversy with attendant legal expenses on both sides, would have gotten the county to this satisfactory pass long ago.
This was a finely balanced judgement, with six judges disagreeing with the conclusion that the courts had not adequately protected the employee's rights and had failed to strike a fair balance between the
relevant competing interests.
[57] The information sought by the defence in this case may have significant probative value in relation to the plaintiff's past and future wage loss, and the value of production is not outweighed by
competing interests such as confidentiality and the time and expense required for the party to produce the documents.
Henderson is correct in noting that there are
competing interests making increasing demand on renewable power beside cars, and that getting that power is really expensive.
Add to that the
multiple competing interests in such a situation and the opportunity for a wrong decision with significant consequences is magnified many times over.»
By weighing a broader range of factors and implications, women fared better at making «consistently fair decisions
when competing interests are at stake.»