Sentences with phrase «serious policy attention»

Not exact matches

The man a high court judge notoriously dismissed as an unreliable witness, whose famously fastidious attention to detail was such that when it came to making the case for the most serious foreign policy decision since Suez, he was perfectly content to sling out some 12 - year - old guff he'd lifted straight off the internet.
By contrast, attention to the academic content — what we teach — is only now beginning to emerge as a serious lever in education policy.
It's a challenge in serious need of innovation and policy attention.
This research is considered to be a critical step in providing much needed scientific evidence as a basis for fostering more serious attention to human - animal bond dynamics and related issues and policy concerns.
If you pay attention to what the climate scinetists are telling us, we don't have forever to get a serious policy in place, internationally and domestically.
This is why governments need to pay serious attention to energy efficiency, encouraging policies that determine how well we use energy.
PHOTO CAPTION: Based on the pioneering work of UC Davis professor Andy Frank, the marketing efforts of Felix Kramer and the engineering efforts of EPRI, grid - chargeable hybrids like the one developed by Energy CS are beginning to get serious attention from both the media and policy makers, if not car companies.
Pay attention, because this next one has some serious implications for energy and transportation policy, and infrastructure: According to research just published in the online edition of Science, rather than converting energy crops to liquid fuel for use in an internal combustion engine, it is far more efficient to convert them to electricity to power vehicles.
It's an interesting study and one that policy - makers should pay attention to as the long - term effects of poor public health become more serious and financially burdensome, for both the Canadian government and individuals.
New and knotty issues of citation policy call for serious attention and fresh approaches.
Those of us in positions of situational authority need to pay serious attention to how our agencies can generate greater policy innovation at the start of the policy cycle while, at the other end, pursuing administrative innovation to improve our delivery capabilities.
The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study1 has attracted considerable scientific and policy attention in recent years, in part because it suggests that potentially preventable childhood experiences, particularly physical and sexual abuse and neglect, may increase a person's risk for serious health problems and higher mortality rates much later in life.
Sadly, I think that the bureaucracies known as CREA, OREA et al have been nicely co-opted by the United Nations levelling syndrome of group - think policies in favour of following theory driven initiatives, guinea pig style, vs paying serious attention to so - called «outdated» tried and true policies based upon empirical evidence.
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