In January, a committee of the federal Liberal party, following a vote in favour of decriminalization a year earlier at the party's convention, came out with a 38 -
page paper advocating full legalization.
Not exact matches
I have only recently been on this degree plan and have learned the bulk of my nutrition knowledge from reading nutrition
papers on the national academy of sciences web
page and seeing what other extremely knowledgeable people, such as Dr. Greger and Jeff Novick, have
advocated.
Given this lean, and the interesting fact that the editorial sections of these
papers were about twice as likely to cite school choice research in their opinion
pages as in news stories (54 mentions to 28), it's easy to see why school choice
advocates might regard the mainstream media as anything but impartial.
I am referring to qualified scientists with a record of scholarship who have specifically commented in the scientific literature on the question, not merely those participating in polls, think - tank policy
papers, or lobbyists and
advocates commenting on blogs and op - ed
pages.
For years, Nebraska shared parenting
advocates have pushed for legislative change, even obtaining favorable editorial
page coverage from influential
papers.