Sentences with phrase «much narrower issue»

At most, as plaintiffs have stated before and will state again at the risk of redundancy, the only relevant issue in this case with respect to global warming is the much narrower issue of what impact, if any, the A.B. 1493 Regulations will have on global warming.

Not exact matches

«This single digital ledger, in economists» jargon, describes a narrow banking model, much like Peel's 1844 Banking Act in the UK that legally split the Bank of England Issue Department from the Banking Department in order to more clearly identify the gold backing for the note iIssue Department from the Banking Department in order to more clearly identify the gold backing for the note issueissue.
«There's a danger in overstating the extent of the ideological shift because the range of issues that we tackle at the municipal level are much narrower than those that are tackled at the state and federal level and I find that there's a broad based consensus on most of the subjects that come before the City Council,» he said.
In 2001 and 2005 we were a narrow party - focusing too much on issues like Europe, immigration and tax.
Ruth Wattenberg, the Ward 3 representative on DC's State Board of Education (SBOE), says «too much testing» and the narrowing of the curriculum it has caused were the two issues that had the most resonance with parents during her campaign.
O'Brien's article took a much narrower view of the issues facing publishing by focusing on a single e-reader and comparing it to the traditional book publishing market:
They have narrowed the issue's introduction down to one of eleven possible change lists... it can't hide from us much longer!
As Drum points out, Gerson doesn't even mention the major battlegrounds like global warming denialism, creationism and intelligent design, and the Gingrich - era shutdown of the Office of Technology Assessment, focusing on a much narrower set of issues including stem cell research and abortion.
The Conference aimed at resolving a much narrower set of issues.
Much has been written about the potential dangers of opinion evidence contaminating the fact finding process, and this commentary generally emerges in the civil litigation or criminal law context where the issues are typically narrow and findings of fact often relate only to a single individual.
First, the Court appeared to put much weight on the fact that the issued patent claims already had struck the proper balance between the patentee's desire for broad claims and the USPTO's rejections that tend to narrow the claims during the examination process.
The Insite case only dealt with a narrow issue: whether an exemption from certain provisions of the CDSA should be granted to a particular facility that almost everyone agreed was doing splendid work very much in the public interest.
This issue was addressed in recent years in Three Rivers District Council v Bank of England (No 6)[2004] UKHL 48, in which the House of Lords overturned the Court of Appeal's judgment seeking to restrict the ambit of legal advice privilege within much narrower limits.
In my opinion, the reasons show that both counsel, in essence, made no attempt to narrow the issues that Justice Myers was asked to decide even though, when one reads the reasons, counsel ought to have known that much of what was before him wasn't germane to the issues he was asked to decide.
As these issues are often much narrower than the original divorce negotiations, they can sometimes be addressed in one or two sessions.
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