Sentences with phrase «with dudgeon»

Not exact matches

Statoil says that the final turbine on its Dudgeon field in England has been installed and the company is «well on its way» to providing over 1 million homes in Europe with renewable electricity.
«Dudgeon offshore wind farm is part of Statoil's strategy of gradually supplementing our oil and gas portfolio with profitable renewable energy,» Irene Rummelhoff, Statoil's executive vice president for New Energy Solutions, said in a statement.
His chief nemesis: Sergeant Major Bradley, a by - the - book martinet played with snarly high dudgeon by David Thewlis.
But those in high dudgeon have to come to grips with reality — this is what happens when scientists and institutions debase the coin of the realm.
This provides a clear schism between the case law of the Strasbourg Court, which not only identified an unjustifiable interference with article 8 on the basis of «sanctions», as relied on by the Court in these proceedings (para. 58), but more importantly, found the «mere existence of such laws to be an infringement of Article 8» [Dudgeon v UK, Norris v Ireland and Modinos v Cyprus].
Unfortunately, the Court's mis - direction on the judicial reasoning protecting private life rights and sexual identity started by Dudgeon, is a shortcoming of the judgment, as the Court fails to engage with the impact that mere criminalisation has on gay and lesbian individuals, even without enforcement.
But imagine their high dudgeon when the entire taxi market morphs into one where every single taxi company and every single Uberite gouges fares during peak periods and any other time they can get away with it.
One of the things I enjoy about reading the Language Log, a cooperative blog by academic linguists, is the ease with which some of the authors slip into high dudgeon.
To explain the meaning of suicides in communities, Professor Dudgeon draws on an analogy used by Professor Michael Chandler, who has worked with First Nation Peoples in Canada to understand youth suicide and self harm — that «suicide is like the miner's canary».
With World Suicide Prevention Day approaching on 10 September, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Evaluation Project (ATSISPEP), headed by Australian University Chancellor Professor Tom Calma and Indigenous Mental Health Commissioner Pat Dudgeon, have issued the statement below calling for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicide rates, which are among the highest in the world, to become a national priority and subject to a national inquiry or Royal Commission.
Professor Pat Dudgeon from the University of Western Australia, is from the Bardi people of the Kimberly area in Western Australia and brings with her a wealth of experience and knowledge.
Walmajarri and Bunaba Kimberley mother Lena Andrews (L) and Indigenous National Mental Health Commissioner Professor Pat Dudgeon with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull at the launch of the ATSISPEP report.
Pat Dudgeon, acknowledged as Australia's first Indigenous psychologist, is Professor with the School of Indigenous Studies at the University of Western Australia and a National Mental Health Commissioner.
Pat Dudgeon: The main message for governments is to fund Aboriginal programs that support Aboriginal people to develop good funding models and submissions and then walk with them and assist them to deal with their own issues.
Pat Dudgeon: I agree with proportionate universalism.
Dudgeon said the «next step of the response, where much of the detail will be decided, is critical,» and called on the government to engage with the community and relevant stakeholders / leaders in Indigenous mental health, suicide prevention and substance abuse:
Dudgeon sees similarities with the work of ATSISPEP and the investigation being undertaken by the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the Northern Territory, which resumes public hearings next month.
Professor Pat Dudgeon, project leader of the ATSISPEP, alongside Adele Cox and others, has developed the National Empowerment Project — an Indigenous - led suicide prevention project — through the University of Western Australia and with local Aboriginal partnership organisations across the country since 2012.
APS apology to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples read by Tim Carey, with Professor Pat Dudgeon on stage.
I pay tribute to several expert Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal professional colleagues for assistance with the wording of the template apology, especially including Professors Helen Milroy, Pat Dudgeon, Colin Tatz and Tim Carey, Mr Tom Brideson, Ms Verina Crawford, and Dr Ernest Hunter.
In an article in NACCHO Aboriginal Health News that can be read in full here, Professors Calma and Dudgeon urge policy makers and services to work with Indigenous communities, who must be in the driver's seat.
Leading Indigenous health experts Professors Tom Calma and Pat Dudgeon have also urged primary health networks to partner with Indigenous communities in the work of suicide prevention, given that the PHNs are receiving funding allocated under the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Suicide Prevention Strategy.
(For more on this — Pat Dudgeon recently edited a special edition of Australian Psychologist on Indigenous psychology with some excellent resources including an overview of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social and emotional wellbeing and mental health).
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