Sentences with phrase «policy discussion paper»

The Coalition last week released its Policy Discussion Paper on Gambling Reform, rejecting the government's mandatory pre-commitment scheme on poker machines as a measure to reduce problem gambling.
[93] Australian Human Rights Commission, Submission to the Office of Indigenous Policy Northern Territory Department of Chief Minister - Outstations Policy Discussion Paper (15 December 2008), pars 19, 25 - 28.
[6] Australian Human Rights Commission, Submission to the Office of Indigenous Policy Northern Territory Department of Chief Minister - Outstations Policy Discussion Paper (15 December 2008), par 12.
[12] See also: Australian Human Rights Commission, Submission to the Office of Indigenous Policy Northern Territory Department of Chief Minister - Outstations Policy Discussion Paper (15 December 2008), par 24.
Our latest policy discussion paper again encourages members to reflect on more issues of particular relevance to younger voters — this time, the environment.

Not exact matches

A PROPOSED policy paper for the operation of Internet discussion sites, including web - based bulletin boards, has been released by the Australian Securities and Invest - ments Commission for public comment.
Share: FacebookTwitterLinkedinGoogle + emailOTTAWA — Clare Demerse, federal policy advisor at Clean Energy Canada, made the following comments in response to today's federal carbon pricing discussion paper: «This proposal is a big step forward on a key climate commitment, and the approach Ottawa has chosen is a promising one.
OTTAWA — Clare Demerse, federal policy advisor at Clean Energy Canada, made the following comments in response to today's federal carbon pricing discussion paper:
A separate discussion paper published by central bank staffers in October 2017 concluded that even under an alternative scenario in which the potential level of growth was ultimately 1 per cent higher than forecast by 2020, the effects on inflation would be «small» and «therefore does not affect the stance of monetary policy
The Program publishes research papers and convenes policy conferences, roundtables and informal events and discussions.
The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College Retirement Policy Program Discussion Paper 09 - 06.
Policy Reform participation in the development of industry submissions, responses to government discussion papers, and the regulatory review processes.
This article is a response to Policy Network's discussion paper In the black Labour: Why fiscal conservatism and social justice go hand - in - hand Roger Liddle is chair of Policy Network and a Labour member of the UK House of Lords
In response to the In the black Labour discussion paper, Policy Network will take forward this debate over the coming months.
This article forms part of a series of responses to Policy Network's discussion paper In the black Labour: Why fiscal conservatism and social justice go hand - in - hand
This article is a response to Policy Network's discussion paper In the black Labour: Why fiscal conservatism and social justice go hand - in - hand Kitty Ussher is a former Labour Treasury minister
I suspect you are right that Ed Miliband may have preferred if policy discussions weren't held through the medium of a national paper, however i like the fact that Burnham was forthright and honest in his thinking.
A discussion of Dr van Rens» policy briefing paper titled The Skills Gap: Is It a Myth?
, American Economic Review, 2005; Anna Egalite, Brian Kisida, and Marcus Winters, «Representation in the Classroom: The Effect of Own - Race Teachers on Student Achievement», Economics of Education Review, 2015; Stephen Holt and Seth Gershenson, «The Impact of Teacher Demographic Representation on Student Attendance and Suspensions», IZA discussion paper 9554, 2015; and Constance Lindsay and Cassandra Hart, «Exposure to Same - Race Teachers and Student Disciplinary Outcomes for Black Students in North Carolina», Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2017.
This process begins with the production of an initial draft of a working paper about the developmental impacts of chronic neglect, including a neurobiological perspective on what happens to the brain when it receives limited or inappropriate stimulation, and a discussion of the relevance of this scientific knowledge for rethinking both policy and practice in child protective services.
Each paper is summarized below, followed by a discussion of what the findings imply for policy reforms.
This discussion paper is a companion piece to the InTASC Model Core Teaching Standards: A Resource for State Dialog (April 2011) and describes policy levers states can use to adopt and implement the new standards.
October 22, 2015 (Minneapolis)-- The Minnesota chapter of Educators 4 Excellence, a teacher - led organization that seeks to elevate the voices of teachers in policy discussions, today released Re-envisioning the Teacher Preparation Experience, a new paper detailing teacher - authored recommendations for the future of teacher preparation programs and regulations.
October 15, 2015 (New York)- Educators 4 Excellence, a teacher - led organization that seeks to elevate the voices of teachers in policy discussions, today released From the Classroom to Congress: ESEA Policy at Play, a new paper detailing teacher - authored recommendations for the future ofpolicy discussions, today released From the Classroom to Congress: ESEA Policy at Play, a new paper detailing teacher - authored recommendations for the future ofPolicy at Play, a new paper detailing teacher - authored recommendations for the future of ESEA.
A new paper by the Economic Policy Institute advances the discussion of these issues by analyzing trends in the influence of race / ethnicity, social class, and gender on students» academic performance in the United States.
This paper argues that, without an enlightened discussion and integration of cultural factors into our policies, curriculum, and instructional practices, the rate of educational progress may be considerably slower than would otherwise be the case.
Wade Pfau, an Associate Professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo, wrote a comment to an earlier blog entry this morning that describes a research paper he has written (the paper is still in its first draft) about the New School Safe Withdrawal Rate concept that I developed with John Walter Russell (and with the help of hundreds of our fellow community members in the Retire Early and Indexing discussion - board communities).
What will get the most discussion in the popular press, of course, are the policy implications of Roe and Baker's paper.
The goal of the paper I have just written is to «restart» the discussion of climate change, which, as I see it, is on the verge of disappearing from view, putting into cold storage both 1) the policy initiatives like carbon prices and regulations that could have short - term impact on wedge technologies like conventional renewables, efficiency, and CCS, and 2) commitments to the advancement of a climate - change - driven research frontier.
The distressing thing to me is that, while one could hardly fault a paper for letting ideology affect editorial discussions on policy matters, the WSJ takes the ideological filter to an extreme and applies it to science as well — both on the editorial page, and in the coverage of science in the news reporting sections of the paper.
It's a short and quite readable piece that offers five potential indicators and links to several enlightening examples, but for a more philosophical dive, you can turn to «Comparability of Effort in International Climate Policy Architecture ``, a discussion paper published at the very beginning of the year by Joseph Aldy of Harvard and William Pizer of Duke in January.
The Harvard Project on Climate Agreements is grateful to the Enel Foundation and the Enel Endowment for Environmental Economics at Harvard University for generous support of a series of annual discussion papers on climate - change policy and related topics in energy policy, of which this paper is the seventh.
We submitted our paper to an open - access «Discussion» journal (ACPD) in hopes of engaging the scientific and policy - making communities in an important conversation about the urgency of reducing fossil fuel emissions and the adequacy of current and proposed policies.
The sharing and discussions at the conference were organised around the following six thematic discussion papers prepared by international experts: 1: Methodologies for Situation Analysis in Urban Agriculture; 2: Appropriate Methodologies for Developing a Facilitating Policy and Planning Framework in Urban Agriculture; 3: Technical Tools for Urban Land Use Planning; 4: Appropriate methods for technology development in urban agriculture; 5: Methods for Monitoring and Evaluation and its adaptation to urban and peri-urban agriculture; 6: Methods for Micro-enterprise Development in Urban Agriculture
One advantage to the environment − according to a discussion paper from the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis − is that ships will burn far less fossil fuel to reach their destination.
If only RC would adopt the CA posting policy we'd have proper «blog» i.e realtime discussion instead of stupifying paper publication timescales.
That mandate is unlikely to change, says David Victor, one of the lead authors of the policy discussion in the April IPCC report and the head writer of one of the papers published Thursday in Science, called «Getting Serious About Categorizing Countries.»
Written by other authors of the last IPCC report, led by Navroz Dubash of the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi, the paper suggests that what is needed are more and earlier discussions between scientists and policymakers in development of future reports.
Discussion journals, with instant «publication» of the discussion paper, can provide a venue for getting policy - relevant papers rapidly into the pubDiscussion journals, with instant «publication» of the discussion paper, can provide a venue for getting policy - relevant papers rapidly into the pubdiscussion paper, can provide a venue for getting policy - relevant papers rapidly into the public arena.
There is a lot of discussion this week about a new paper in PNAS (Anderegg et al, 2010) that tries to assess the credibility of scientists who have made public declarations about policy directions.
This paper provides recommendations and options for harmonizing accounting rules for developed country, or Annex I, emissions reduction pledges for a post-2012 climate policy under discussion in the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change «s (UNFCCC) Ad Hoc Working Group on Long - term...
The RET Review recommends weakening the RET in one key way (here the details have changed from the discussion paper, but the same wrongheaded policy intention remains).
These tools include argument mapping applications and Semantic Web technology — described in new papers by Professor Tom van Engers and Dr. Adam Wyner — for organizing policy discussions into subject - related threads, with visual displays of the reasoning underlying the arguments that make up the discussion, translation of policy arguments into the preferred language of each user, and Web 2.0 services facilitating users» participation in the discussions.
Similarly, the Dickson biography declares that although two specific decisions were reported as «By the Court» judgments, Dickson's own papers put it beyond doubt that Dickson himself wrote the reasons in question — but, again, there is no discussion of why the impersonal label was used at all, no indication of why Dickson did not assume individual responsibility in the usual way, no hint of a broader practice or policy.
Major changes in immigration policy have historically been achieved through legislation and regulations, which would normally involve public consultation, task forces, discussion papers, committee hearings, and parliamentary debate, as well as consultation of regulations before approval by Cabinet.
During the period from September through December 2008, the ACLCO undertook an extensive consultation with Ontario's Community Legal Clinics in accordance with its Consultation Policy (2008)(Word & PDF) to develop a response to LAO's Discussion Paper on «Roles, Responsibilities, Relationships and Accountability Regarding Clinic Law Services» of July 2008.
A Discussion Paper has been developed to provide background on the current policies, programs and supports in place for students with disability in Canberra public schools: Discussion Paper (399 kb)
, Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, Discussion Paper No. 215.
The paper concludes with discussions of the gaps in current intervention research, of barriers encountered in the implementation and evaluation of family - based prevention programs, and of the implications for future preventive intervention research and for social policy related to family - based preventive interventions.
It released a discussion paper and engaged Pat Dodson to conduct community consultations in relation to the development of the policy.
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