Sentences with phrase «radical reforms in»

It is good, of course, but it would not give any result without radical reforms in science.
«It is my hope that this government will make radical reforms in the bureaucratic control over research.»
They urge the Government to make the UK's four Children's Commissioners responsible for monitoring radical reforms in practice and policy in this field.
We also know that, by dismantling large parts of the Welfare State, radical reforms in the United Kingdom and the United States have eroded the necessary solidarity between rich and the poor.
Bachelet's most recent presidency (2014 - 2017) saw some of the most radical reforms in the country's history.
With this rising population and the lack of radical reform in most underdeveloped countries, particularly in the rural communities where the large masses of these people live, the world food crisis will recur when again the crops are less favorable; the danger is that it will then gradually take on an ever more permanent and disastrous dimension.
And thank God there are a growing number of feminists who are campaigning for a radical reform in this matter - not through getting men to wash an equal number of dishes, but by reviving in them the sense of what their man's role as a father calls for.

Not exact matches

And throughout much of the world, it remains a messy, inefficient, expensive sector in need of radical reform.
To a large extent, the evolutionary shift reflected the absence of a catalytic crisis such as the radical program of economic reform that occurred in New Zealand following a prolonged period of poor economic outcomes, or in the case of the UK and Sweden, the sudden departure from the ERM.
«At a time when, if Bob Lighthizer had his way, he'd be doing radical reform of the W.T.O., it seems weird to poke him in the eye with a case like this,» Mr. Tucker said.
In the 1980s, treasury secretary Don Regan said the first Reagan reform proposal was written on a word processor to signal the administration's openness to negotiation and radical alteration.
The bulls argued that they were not, and that while poor investment decisions and low consumption growth could indeed exist, these could be addressed administratively within the model and did not require radical reforms that would essentially result in an abandoning of the growth model.
In October 1991 I received a call from Moscow, telling me that Yegor Gaidar [24] was likely to become the head of Yeltsin's economic team, and that Russia would launch radical market reforms with or without the rest of the Soviet Union.
Although one could imagine all sorts of radical Blue Sky tax reforms — or much less radical ideas like a carbon tax or a value added tax — in the context of the current debate about how to make some alterations to the current tax system, I would suggest the following five elements in the spirit of 1986:
Business and consumer surveys broadly continued to suggest the post-election bounce in sentiment was intact, despite signs some policy initiatives from the Trump administration — including key tax and health care reforms — might take longer to implement, and in some cases be less radical, than earlier indications.
Citizens of other countries where the financial system was crippled or injured are much more aggressive in their support for radical surgery, such as certain provisions embedded in the U.S. financial reform bill.
Often viewed as Radical Reformers, these Christians were convinced that the reforms of Luther, Zwingli and Calvin didn't go far enough in their attempts to decentralize power.
In the context of the economic crisis of the Great Depression, the moral reform precedents lent credibility to a radical understanding of the Constitution.
For example, the Radicals at level 3 bring into focus aspects of the Gentry, Rotten Boroughs, Political Reform, Philosophy, Property and Monarchy, showing how they relate to each other in terms of the Radicals» experience in the passing of the Reform Bill.
But we could hypothesize that «whenever a principle such as «Parliamentary Reform» is found in the antecedent world as a contrast between (a) moderate revival of an old ideal, (b) ultraconservative reaction, (c) popular anticipation of radical change, and (d) a vehicle for the ambitions of young politicians and idealists, then the principle in form (d) is most likely to be articulated as the primary element in some event emerging from that antecedent world.»
Unless, there is radical reform, the next generation will face much higher taxes, much reduced government spending or — quite likely in some countries — complete economic breakdown.
He finds value in the church, but at the same time calls for a radical reform.
Only as we rethink the radical nature of Christian community and reform our institutions so that they might faithfully strive to transmit their cumulative tradition through ritual and life, to nurture and convert persons to Christian faith through common experience and interaction, and to prepare and motivate persons for individual and corporate action in society can true Christian education emerge.
As Arminian doctrine or Arminian attitudes spread among many of the popular revivalists, the stress was on a change of will rather than a radical rebirth, on man's capacity to reform himself rather than the need for death to self and new birth in Christ.
But in order to accept this position we need first to reform our standard notions of perception; and this reformation will not occur without a conversion to the radical empiricism of attending once again to our experiencing itself.
In addition to these concrete demands are general demands, of which the most important are: emancipation of women; radical agricultural reform; general reduction in working hours; disarmament; the rejection of all forms or racism; the creation of a planned transfer of wealth from the countries of the North to the countries of the South to compensate for the pillage which these peoples have been and still are subjected tIn addition to these concrete demands are general demands, of which the most important are: emancipation of women; radical agricultural reform; general reduction in working hours; disarmament; the rejection of all forms or racism; the creation of a planned transfer of wealth from the countries of the North to the countries of the South to compensate for the pillage which these peoples have been and still are subjected tin working hours; disarmament; the rejection of all forms or racism; the creation of a planned transfer of wealth from the countries of the North to the countries of the South to compensate for the pillage which these peoples have been and still are subjected to.
In Luther there is the danger of complacency about the established order, and a deflection of the Christian from radical reforming improvements in the struggle for justicIn Luther there is the danger of complacency about the established order, and a deflection of the Christian from radical reforming improvements in the struggle for justicin the struggle for justice.
In the earlier phases of the movement the attack was still disguised as Christian «spiritualization» or «reform»; in the later phases, with the more radical immanentization of the eschaton, it became openly anti-ChristiaIn the earlier phases of the movement the attack was still disguised as Christian «spiritualization» or «reform»; in the later phases, with the more radical immanentization of the eschaton, it became openly anti-Christiain the later phases, with the more radical immanentization of the eschaton, it became openly anti-Christian.
The Church authorities, whatever they were planning about his own personal case, had shown no interest in the kind of radical, all over reform which he was now asking for.
In that radical commitment to real dialogue across theological and creedal divides, he was faithful to the teaching of two of his masters: Arthur Carl Piepkorn, who helped plant the seed of Richard's ecumenical work by teaching him to think of Lutheranism as a reform movement within the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church of Christ; and Abraham Joshua Heschel, who inspired Richard to enter into the divinely mandated entanglement of Jews and Christians of which St. Paul wrote to the Romans.
Both writers wished to purge the Church rather than to reform it in the radical Lutheran way.
The excursus on «The Legacy of the Reformation» devotes paragraphs to Luther, Calvin, Henry VIII and the radical reformers, and concludes with a recognition of the reform within Roman Catholicism: «The Roman Church worked to get back to its roots in scripture and tradition.
The Football Association have proposed radical reforms aimed to increasing the number of homegrown players in the English leagues, and it now appears that those changes may be necessary.
«To help get that revolution started in the public sector, working with the Cabinet Office, I've been pushing hard for radical reforms to the way in which the Civil Service pays and supports its staff after their children are born.
The Chancellor George Osborne, in his first Budget, outlined plans for a radical reform of the welfare system.
The eleventh - hour attempt by Republicans in the U.S. Senate to repeal the Affordable Care Act once seemed like the longest of long shots, but now appears to have a chance — albeit slim — at passage, even though it has been deemed the most «radical» of all the Obamacare reform efforts the GOP has debated thus far.
The seminar offers a glimpse of the frustration Hilton felt in government as he faced numerous obstacles to implementing a radical reform agenda.
Convening such a body would provide a space to debate how best to address systematic political inequality, whether through thorough - going electoral reform including PR and compulsory voting, the radical overhaul of the democratic aberration that is the Lords, or in reforming party funding, all of which the report supports.
Young people and potential lib dem voters will be particularly attracted to the radical constitutional reform, and middle England and pensioners will place high value in public service reform and voluntary individual budgets etc..
The Coalition's apparent zeal for radical market reform would seem to put paid to Cameron's claim that he does not believe in «great schemes to remake the world».
The new Justice Secretary, Liz Truss, seeks more cash with the strong support of her predecessor, Michael Gove, in order to implement important and radical prison reforms.
Spain, where republican theory was explicitly used as a guide by the Zapatero government in 2004 - 2011, has provided practical insight in this field, while in the Republic of Ireland, Fintan O'Toole has argued for radical reform to implement genuine republicanism.
Indeed, interest in «the Great Charter of Liberties» of 1215 had grown over the previous quarter of a century, fuelled by an explosion of radical reform publishing during the Regency years.
Philip Blonde takes an almost Democratic Republican ideology towards public service reform in advocating using social entreprises to manage schools, hospitals, sure start centres etc, which would be democratically connected to all other schools etc through out the country and collectively elect the central management who allocate budget spending to each and every school etc. http://www.respublica.org.uk/publications/ownership-state It sounds more like a radical libertarian socialist solution to public services than a free market conservative solution to public services.
If, in a few years» time, the SNP is legislating for a citizens» basic income and has embarked upon a thorough reworking of the fiscal status quo then it would have a good claim to be «radical» and «bold», but hinting at such widespread reform is rather different from actually implementing it.
Both Cameron and Nick Clegg in May 2010 declared the Coalition would «take Britain in a new historic direction» and the Coalition, they claimed, «has the potential for era - changing, convention - challenging, radical reform».
For the most part, however, what the first minister served up as part of a long - trailed effort to «refresh» her administration after more than ten years in office sounded familiar: educational reform («most radical change»), more cash to boost economic growth («raising our ambition») and the creation of a Scottish National Investment Bank.
Only one European socialist party really did well in the European elections — in Greece — is also the party that has been most radical in its institutional reforms.
So essentially we've been more reforming, more radical government than anyone in history, but we have to follow that through to its conclusion, because there is a danger in some areas that we leave a slightly unstable state of affairs which would be extremely unfortunate.
In addition to a new focus on victims, we need radical police reform to ensure that local concerns are taken seriously.
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