Not exact matches
A genuine and sustained debate among MPs about the details of the
policy regime, much of it centred
around the proposals in a paper from moderate backbench critics Alan Whitehead and Peter Bradley, has led to significant government concessions and a new focus on questions of increasing access to university from a broader social intake.
The
policy report illustrated, however, that there is too much uncertainly
around treatment
regimes in an unregulated market to target the appropriate level of care.
There is little indication that the consensus that resulted in NCLB is waning or that a coalition is forming
around a new
policy regime.
This comes amongst uncertainty
around Australia's 2020 targets, with a lack of clarity on whether the new
policy regime will meet 5 % and a review of a review of a possible review to take place in 2015 as to any further commitments.
And where the old
regime required that everyone band together
around the same core motivation and goals, policymakers today are likely to make the most progress to the degree that they refrain from centrally justifying energy innovation, resilience to extreme weather, and pollution reduction as «climate
policy.»
As the discussions of end of life law and
policy reform continue
around the world, the pathways followed by those who have already moved to permissive
regimes lie before those who have not.
The proposed
policies in the DoC's «green paper» aim to «improve the state of affairs domestically and advance interoperability among different privacy
regimes around the world so that, globally, Internet...
(3) Lead by example in domestic
policy areas, including addressing loose laws on wiretaps, ambiguous oversight of intelligence agencies, shoddy content filtering mechanisms
around access to pornography and hate speech, questionable deep packet inspection and data retention practices by internet service providers, and other areas in which Canadian practices provide justification for China's own domestic censorship and surveillance
regime.
The proposed
policies in the DoC's «green paper» aim to «improve the state of affairs domestically and advance interoperability among different privacy
regimes around the world so that, globally, Internet services can continue to flourish.»