Sentences with phrase «part of parliamentary committees»

In the United Kingdom, for example, judges are sometimes invited to appear as part of parliamentary committees looking into legal and justice issues.

Not exact matches

But that is part of a fast - disappearing cooperative process when parliamentary committees were more than a government rubber stamp.
Secretary General to the General Synod, William Fittall, told a parliamentary committee that although the Church does not have to meet equality laws, selection boards will be encouraged to use the «positive discrimination» part of the rules.
[156] As part of his role at the publisher, Crone had served as the News of the World's chief lawyer and gave evidence before parliamentary committees, that he had uncovered no evidence of phone hacking beyond the criminal offences committed by the royal editor Clive Goodman.
The Home Affairs Select Committee (HASC) has taken various forms of evidence and undertaking during the whole affair, and continues to investigate various aspects as part of its normal parliamentary undertakings.
«Under the Labour government, hard won rights and liberties that have been a fundamental part of British life for centuries were eroded or simply cast aside,» said Tom Brake, co-chair of the Liberal Democrat parliamentary committee for home affairs.
Speaking on Eyewitness News, Mr. Vanderpuye, who was part of the committee, noted that «Parliamentary candidates were not...
11.35 am: Paul Burstow, the health minister, John Pugh, the co-chair of the Lib Dem parliamentary health committee and Shirley Williams, the Lib Dem grandee and health bill «rebel», take part in a question and answer session on health.
The parliamentary education committee wrote to Damian Hinds after a hearing last week with former chancellor George Osborne and other representatives of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership highlighted a «stark educational attainment gap between the north and other parts of England, particularly for disadvantaged pupils».
His next step was to dress up his remarks as a peer - reviewed policy paper and to submit them to the parliamentary committee so that they would become part of the permanent record of that committee..
The non-compliance of Facebook with European data protection laws was in the spotlight yesterday, during an oral hearing in front of the UK parliamentary committee that's looking into the Cambridge Analytica - Facebook data misuse scandal — as part of a wider enquiry into online disinformation and political campaigning.
Damian Collins, the U.K. lawmaker who chairs a parliamentary committee on media and culture, said he intended to ask Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg to testify before the group, or send a senior executive to do so, as part of its inquiry into how social - media manipulation affected Britain's referendum decision to exit from the European Union.
It did this through submissions to all the inquiries conducted by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund, through a number of important reviews of aspects of the native title process, including a review commissioned by ATSIC into Native Title Representative Bodies32 and a review of PBC funding.33 It also commissioned an important paper in relation to water rights, of which native title was an important part.34 It is not clear whether the policy development role that ATSIC exercised in relation to native title issues has been transferred into the new arrangements and if so, how it is to be developed by the government.
This dialogue has occurred between the Australian government and and two UN treaty committees, on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (August 1999 and March 2000) and the Human Rights Committee (HRC)(July 2000); between Indigenous non-government organizations and UN committees on each of these occasions; between the government and Indigenous and non-Indigenous representatives before the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Fund (PJC) in February and March 2000; and, at a broader level, among Australian citizens and a range of institutions, as part of a continuing debate about the meaning of reconciliation.
Part of this chapter is based on my Submission to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund, Inquiry Into Indigenous Land Use Agreements (PJC Inquiry), August 2001.
Attorney - General's Department, Submission No. 24, Part I, p17; quoted in Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, Sixteenth report of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund - CERD and the Native Title Amendment Act 1998, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra, 2000, p8.
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