Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Imperial Presidency" ¶ 22
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Declining and economic
Declining exports, reduced domestic consumption and fixed asset accumulation hit Hungary hard during the Financial Crisis of 2008, making the country enter a severe recession of-6. 4 %, one of the worst economic contractions in its history.
Declining consumer confidence is a sign of slowing economic growth and may indicate that the economy is headed into trouble.
His book Economic Growth and Declining Social Welfare advances the idea that in modern economic growth there is an increasing output of useless and even discomforting things, such as advertising.
Declining television ratings on NBC had already led many to believe that the NBA's next television rights fee would be lower than previous years, and the economic recession made that a likely scenario.

Declining and growth
Declining competitiveness in tourism and especially in manufacturing are expected to act as a drag on growth until structural changes are effected.
Declining emigration during the Celtic Tiger years of the early 21st century, combined with tighter US immigration restrictions, led to a decline in the number of clubs in the USA, but the subsequent collapse of the Irish economy led to a resumption of emigration and growth of international GAA clubs.

capacity and regulate
When the transmission protocol uses the dropped-packets symptom of filled buffers to regulate its transmit rate, as the Internet's TCP does, bandwidth is fairly shared at near theoretical capacity with minimal network congestion delays.
Rage problems are conceptualized as " the inability to process emotions or life's experiences " either because the capacity to regulate emotion ( Schore, 1994 ) has never been sufficiently developed or because it has been temporarily lost due to more recent trauma.
The tunnel was expected to regulate the amount of traffic using the bridge despite the increased capacity.
This overwhelms the body's capacity to supply oxygen, remove carbon dioxide, and regulate body temperature, eventually leading to circulatory collapse and death if not treated quickly.
There is a dam on Cache Creek to increase the lake's capacity and to regulate outflow.
* Police power, the capacity of a state to regulate behaviours and enforce order within its territory
In susceptible individuals, these drugs can induce a drastic and uncontrolled increase in skeletal muscle oxidative metabolism, which overwhelms the body's capacity to supply oxygen, remove carbon dioxide, and regulate body temperature, eventually leading to circulatory collapse and death if not treated quickly.
It is thought to represent a breakdown of an inchoate attachment strategy and it appears to affect the capacity to regulate emotions.
Townsend was appointed in 1923 as a member of the International Joint Commission created to regulate the use of the boundary waters between the United States and Canada, in which capacity he served until his death in Jackson.
In United States constitutional law, police power is the capacity of the states to regulate behavior and enforce order within their territory for the betterment of the general welfare, health, and safety of their inhabitants.
It is also an opportunity to recognize the considerable challenges we face in maintaining their capacity to regulate the global climate, supply essential ecosystem services and provide sustainable livelihoods and safe recreation.
These factors influence the capacity to know " where to draw the line " appropriately, and regulate one's own behaviour so that it remains consistent.
Equally difficult are the Family Laws which regulate incestuous relationships and capacity.
In his capacity as Secretary of the Interior, he was the appellant in the Supreme Court case Kleppe v. New Mexico ( 1976 ), in which it was decided that a state could not challenge the authority of the federal government to regulate federal lands within its borders.

capacity and private
However, in certain applications where discs will not be distributed or exchanged outside a private group and will not be archived for a long time, a proprietary format may be an acceptable way to obtain greater capacity ( up to 1. 2 GB with GigaRec or 1. 8 GB with HD-BURN on 99 minute media ).
Vancouver gravely replied that he was unable " in a private capacity to answer for his public conduct in his official duty " and offered instead to submit to formal examination by flag officers.
To help people help themselves and their environment by providing resources, sharing knowledge, building capacity and forging partnerships in the public and private sectors.
In the eyes of Torah there is, strictly speaking, no such thing as the purely private domain, for even in solitude-be it the privacy of the bath or the unconsciousness of sleep-one has the capacity and the duty to serve God.
Whereas " private property " grants an individual exclusive control over a thing whether it is in use or not, and regardless of its productive capacity, " possession " grants no rights to things that are not in use.
President is immune from legal proceedings while in office in respect of any acts done or omitted to be done by him either in his official or private capacity.
For instance, if the head of government of a country were to refuse to enforce a decision of that country's highest court, it would not be civil disobedience, since the head of government would be acting in her or his capacity as public official rather than private citizen.
He refused to give instructions to the RPR voters but said that he supported the incumbent president " in a private capacity ", which was almost like a de facto support of the Socialist Party's ( PS ) candidate, François Mitterrand, who was elected by a broad majority.
This allows a network operator to provide a private end-to-end E1 circuit between customers in different countries that share single high capacity links in between.
Since public peering allows networks interested in peering to interconnect with many other networks through a single port, it is often considered to offer " less capacity " than private peering, but to a larger number of networks.
It is held in trust, and cannot be sold or owned by the Sovereign in a private capacity.
His immediate successors did not always reside in Number 10 ( preferring their larger private residences ) but the home has nevertheless become established as the official residence of the Prime Minister ( in his or her capacity as First Lord of the Treasury ).
Monarchs and members of their family have also owned in a private capacity homes and land in Canada: King Edward VIII owned Bedingfield Ranch, near Pekisko, Alberta ; The Marquess of Lorne and Princess Louise owned a cottage on the Cascapédia River in Quebec ; and Princess Margaret owned Portland Island between its gifting to her by the Crown in Right of British Columbia in 1958 and her death in 2002, though she offered it back to the Crown on permanent loan in 1966 and the island and surrounding waters eventually became Princess Margaret Marine Park.
On 12 March 2012, Pioneer Easy Bus Company, a private transport company, started public bus service in Kampala with an estimated 100 buses each with a 60-passenger capacity ( 30 seated and 30 standing ), acquired from China.
Neither the Belgian people nor the Belgian government was interested, however, and Leopold eventually began trying to acquire a colony in his private capacity as an ordinary citizen.
This has led to most IT services within the UK Government being managed by private companies ; the US firm EDS now has a large proportion of the total, which some have suggested gives it the capacity to manipulate pricing, or even be a strategic threat to UK interests.
The former asserts that Scipio was unsuccessful in his effort to obtain the province, and, offended by the rejection, remained after the end of his consulship, in a private capacity at Rome.
13 ) As a context for interrelations, the World Social Forum seeks to strengthen and create new national and international links among organizations and movements of society, that, in both public and private life, will increase the capacity for non-violent social resistance to the process of dehumanization the world is undergoing and to the violence used by the State, and reinforce the humanizing measures being taken by the action of these movements and organizations.
As well as organizing the conference, the steering committee also maintained a register of attendee names and contact details, with the aim of creating an informal network of individuals who could call upon one another in a private capacity.
A private memorial service was held in the Twin Cities suburb of Wayzata on the afternoon of March 12 ( declared " Kirby Puckett Day " in Minneapolis ), followed by a public ceremony held at the Metrodome attended by family, friends, ballplayers past and present, and approximately 15, 000 fans ( an anticipated capacity crowd dwindled through the day due to a pending blizzard ).
The Association of African American Museums, also located in Wilberforce and supported by the private university, works to build professional capacity among smaller museums.
She also occasionally engaged in civic functions in a private capacity.
Construction of 72 private boxes in 1985 increased the seating capacity to 56, 926, and a 1990 addition of 36 additional boxes and 1, 920 theatre-style club seats brought the number to 59, 543.
In 1995, a $ 4. 7-million project put 90 more private boxes in the previously open north end zone, again giving the stadium the feel of a complete bowl and increasing capacity to 60, 890.
Although the private life of the new archbishop appears to have been the reverse of exemplary he attempted to carry out some very necessary reforms in his new official capacity ; he also continued the struggle for precedence, which had been carried on for many years between the archbishops of Canterbury and of York.

1.435 seconds.