Sentences with phrase «with factual material»

From the guidelines; Approval of the Summary for Policymakers at the Session of the Working Group, signifies that it is consistent with the factual material contained in the full scientific, technical and socioeconomic assessment or Special Report accepted by the Working Group.
The Montessori philosophy is designed to integrate children with the world around them by presenting them with factual material.

Not exact matches

Burrough, the author of the source material, has admitted that, although the movie takes a certain amount of artistic license with history, it is the most factual telling of Dillinger's story thus far to appear on screen.
The source material is a novel by David Ebershoff, which plunks The Danish Girl somewhere midway between a loosely factual historical drama and a literary adaptation; besides lopping a few decades off the story, it presents Gerda Wegener as strictly straight, whereas her historical counterpart is best remembered for her lesbian erotica, full of pale young women with speck noses, tiny feet, and chicken - leg thighs.
With Ricciarelli doing most of the talking and Fehling cracking generational jokes, they discuss the film's origins, the composite characters and factual material, the themes, Germany's reaction to the movie, the use of cantor music, the influence of the 1970s NBC miniseries «Holocaust», and the history depicted.
If the material is at times excessively thick with factual detail, it is marvelously thin on ideological moralizing and full of practical suggestions for improving the law.
(1) A credit services organization, its salespersons, agents, and representatives, and independent contractors who sell or attempt to sell the services of a credit services organization may not do any of the following: (a) conduct any business regulated by this chapter without first: (i) securing a certificate of registration from the division; and (ii) unless exempted under Section 13 -21-4, posting a bond, letter of credit, or certificate of deposit with the division in the amount of $ 100,000; (b) make a false statement, or fail to state a material fact, in connection with an application for registration with the division; (c) charge or receive any money or other valuable consideration prior to full and complete performance of the services the credit services organization has agreed to perform for the buyer; (d) dispute or challenge, or assist a person in disputing or challenging an entry in a credit report prepared by a consumer reporting agency without a factual basis for believing and obtaining a written statement for each entry from the person stating that that person believes that the entry contains a material error or omission, outdated information, inaccurate information, or unverifiable information; (e) charge or receive any money or other valuable consideration solely for referral of the buyer to a retail seller who will or may extend credit to the buyer, if the credit that is or will be extended to the buyer is upon substantially the same terms as those available to the general public; (f) make, or counsel or advise any buyer to make, any statement that is untrue or misleading and that is known, or that by the exercise of reasonable care should be known, to be untrue or misleading, to a credit reporting agency or to any person who has extended credit to a buyer or to whom a buyer is applying for an extension of credit, with respect to a buyer's creditworthiness, credit standing, or credit capacity; (g) make or use any untrue or misleading representations in the offer or sale of the services of a credit services organization or engage, directly or indirectly, in any act, practice, or course of business that operates or would operate as fraud or deception upon any person in connection with the offer or sale of the services of a credit services organization; and (h) transact any business as a credit services organization, as defined in Section 13 -21-2, without first having registered with the division by paying an annual fee set pursuant to Section 63J -1-504 and filing proof that it has obtained a bond or letter of credit as required by Subsection (2).
He was especially close to the latter — both sharing an interest in artworks that refer to nothing but their factual presence, with an emphasis on industrial materials and intense colour — and significantly he dedicated a number of works to Judd.
He was especially close to the latter - both sharing an interest in artworks that refer to nothing but their factual presence, with an emphasis on industrial materials and intense colour - and this is signified by his dedication of a number of works to Judd.
Yet all GWPF Briefing Papers have been shown to be riven with controversial material that is in no way factual or well - founded in evidence.
stated that it «must ascertain whether the domestic courts conducted an in - depth examination of the entire family situation and of a whole series of factors, in particular of a factual, emotional, psychological, material and medical nature, and made a balanced and reasonable assessment of the respective interests of each person, with constant concern for determining what the best solution would be for the
[36] Some have suggested that «but for» proof must be logically or conceptually impossible before material contribution to risk is available... Clearly the impossibility in those examples was related to difficulties with factual proof, not to logical problems inherent in the peculiarities of the case.
If we accept that Athey material contribution to injury is dead, and was probably a suspect concept to begin with, then «factual causation» = «but for necessary cause of injury».
The provincial and territorial trial and appellate judges of Canada, and many commentators, adopted this alternative approach to proof of factual causation with some relish (of many varieties), describing this approach as the Athey material contribution test.
Without recourse to the without prejudice materials the court held that the agreement could not be properly construed in accordance with the well recognised principles identified in Investors Compensations Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896 and Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] UKHL 38, [2009] AC 1101: principally, that objective facts which emerge during negotiations are admissible as part of the factual matrix in order to assist courts to interpret an agreement in accordance with the parties» true intentions.
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