Sentences with phrase «respect to the questions posed»

With respect to the questions posed at the beginning of this post, four sections of that law are relevant: sections 5, 10, 17 and 23.

Not exact matches

My idle curiosity did get the better in one respect causing me to pose your question to 2 other people.
He spoke movingly of how he had first had to come to terms with these questions when reporting on sexual abuse of minors in a Protestant missionary agency, and how the past year's reporting on the Catholic situation had posed for him painful ethical dilemmas with respect to issues of confidentiality, perspective, and the dangers of playing to stereotypes.
I'm often told that these are questions that atheists and agnostics ask of believers in order to «corner» them, not questions any self - respecting Christian would pose herself.
This visceral work of cinema is a testament to the unassailable human spirit and poses one of the questions that will define this century: Will our global society emerge from fear, isolation, and self - interest and choose a path of openness, freedom, and respect for humanity?
As they read closely, pose questions, and probe ideas, students learn to value their voice, respect others» ideas, and become lifelong learners.
To present, today, an exhibition from 1969 just as it was, maintaining its original visual and formal relations and links between the works, has posed a series of questions on the complexity and very meaning of the project, which has developed through a profound debate from various perspectives: the artistic, the architectural and the curatorial.This was the challenge: how could we find and communicate a limit to a non-limit, creating a place that would reflect exactly the architectural structures of the Kunsthalle, but also an asymmetrical space with respect to our time and imbued with an energy and tension equivalent to that felt at BerTo present, today, an exhibition from 1969 just as it was, maintaining its original visual and formal relations and links between the works, has posed a series of questions on the complexity and very meaning of the project, which has developed through a profound debate from various perspectives: the artistic, the architectural and the curatorial.This was the challenge: how could we find and communicate a limit to a non-limit, creating a place that would reflect exactly the architectural structures of the Kunsthalle, but also an asymmetrical space with respect to our time and imbued with an energy and tension equivalent to that felt at Berto a non-limit, creating a place that would reflect exactly the architectural structures of the Kunsthalle, but also an asymmetrical space with respect to our time and imbued with an energy and tension equivalent to that felt at Berto our time and imbued with an energy and tension equivalent to that felt at Berto that felt at Bern?
With respect to my previous response, you asked an ill - posed question, I gave what I thought was a reasonable answer to what you actually wanted to know.
For this second part of a Yale Forum special report on «lessons learned,» freelance writer John Wihbey asked respected science writers and journalism experts questions along the lines of those posed in Part I to leading climate science researchers: For the journalism community, what are the key «lessons learned» from the experiences and controversies of the past 12 months?
[3] The following year, the Dutch authorities, ironically the first country in the world to recognise in 1981 [4] the protection of gay men as a Particular Social Group under the 1951 Refugee Convention, [5] posed three questions to be addressed by the Court, through the prism of the 2004 Qualification Directive, [6] with respect to the asylum claims of 3 gay men from Senegal, Sierra Leone and Uganda: [7] Continue reading →
[3] The following year, the Dutch authorities, ironically the first country in the world to recognise in 1981 [4] the protection of gay men as a Particular Social Group under the 1951 Refugee Convention, [5] posed three questions to be addressed by the Court, through the prism of the 2004 Qualification Directive, [6] with respect to the asylum claims of 3 gay men from Senegal, Sierra Leone and Uganda: [7]
This case poses an interesting question with respect to the appropriate function of amicus curiae in our courts: to what extent should the interests of amicus curiae be aligned with those of the parties?
The tribunal posed the question whether in respect of any applicant the risk would be materially increased if he were required to give evidence without anonymity.
The tribunal had correctly posed the question whether in respect of any applicant the risk would be materially increased if he were required to give evidence without anonymity.
In respect of the issues and questions section of the paper, the questions posed there attempt to identify potential problems, contradictions and dilemmas in the benchmarking reconciliation project as a basis for discussion.
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