Sentences with phrase «needs deep reform»

Not exact matches

You don't need to dig too deep into the rule to understand it's not just a pro-investor reform - it's also pro-business.
The notion of a Church always in need of purification and reform is drawn not from the Reformation slogan ecclesia semper reformanda, but from within the Church's deepest inner dynamics: its longing to be joined to its spousal head, Christ the Lord, and its passion to share his love with those to whom it has been commissioned to bring the gospel — that is, everyone.
The deep changes needed in our world can not occur without the self - reform of major institutions.
Which brings me to the deeper reason you will need not simply to address food prices but to make the reform of the entire food system one of the highest priorities of your administration: unless you do, you will not be able to make significant progress on the health care crisis, energy independence or climate change.
Ultimately, people will gravitate towards closed rather than open primaries in my view: (i) open primaries would need state involvement so are a deeper proposition (you need to run them concurrently and they would be too costly for the parties if done properly); (ii) vested interests may well prevail if the proposed reform is not building on the current system (as indeed they have in the Tory party where they experimented with this quarter - heartedly).
Making the authority over the district permanent would «build predictability into the system, which is important for bringing about the deep, long - range reforms that are needed
Over time it needs to be combined with deeper reforms.
This goes deeper than the four who have been «named and shamed», the whole House appears to be in disrepair and in desperate need of reform.
«In terms of the future, our country where no party has an overall majority and we have some deep and pressing problems - a huge deficit, deep social problems, a political system in need of reform.
«We have some deep and pressing problems: a huge deficit, deep social problems and a political system in need of reform.
«I have spoken with the de Blasio Administration about the urgent need for reforms and called for substantive changes that include splitting the responsibilities of ACS into different agencies; implementing rigorous oversight over contract agencies; adequately training and supervising caseworkers; and providing deeper ongoing supports to children in foster care or child preventative services.»
is RECOGNIZING that the mayoral control «reform» — like previous efforts to change the system's governance without clearly articulating the educational purpose of the reform or facing society's deep systemic problems of poverty and racism — still leaves the city with schools that fail to meet the academic, social and emotional needs of our students;
It is our hope that this global recognition of Dr. Rodchenkov's story by the Academy will continue to shed sunlight on decades of Russian interference, and the need for deep reform to protect clean athletes and to uphold the Olympic ideal and ethics of fair play by all nations on the world stage.»
OECD's BIAC has also documented employers» wishes for deep curricular reforms to modernize content and embed competencies in order to meet today's market needs.
However, by the time Sizer wrote his seminal 1985 report, A Study of High Schools, and A Nation at Risk warned of education failure and the need for deep reform, that earlier sense of utopia was slipping away.
In an article in Educational Leadership, he presents the case that, like haiku, educational reform needs to be simple and deep.
According to the preliminary numbers, the board would need to dip into its reserve to maintain its level of funding to schools, avoid deep cuts to the district's central office and sustain staple programs like summer school and key reforms like Race to the Top work.
Even so, liberals and conservatives will need remedial homework to better understand the requisites for deep - rooted, classroom - based school reform.
But, given the host of competing problems — a deep economic recession, the urgent need for health care reform, geopolitical instabilities in the Middle East and elsewhere, soaring federal debt, and so on — selling the electorate on a set of fundamental changes in the way we consume and produce energy in the short run — and congressional appropriators on making the large investments needed to bring these changes about in the long run — will be a tough task, even for Barack Obama and his newly appointed team of highly competent advisers, and a Congress that has given every indication that it will take up and give priority to climate legislation.
By approaching such reform in two stages, the mainstream society is able to come to a deeper appreciation of the need for such agreements and to have a more detailed understanding of the issues involved.
Policy makers need to be clear about what outcomes they seek to achieve in any reform proposal and ensure that the goals are sustainable, realistic, consider the commercial and non-commercial value of Indigenous land and do not disenfranchise Indigenous Australian from our lands or drive us deeper into poverty.
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