Replacing corruption with good governance is the only sure way to prosperity for Africa. |
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Along with creating new governance arrangements, the constitution seeks to give all Kenyans a shared stake in the country's future. |
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Harrigan's predecessors helped establish corporate governance as a force for change. |
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The quashing of that verdict led to the collapse of the supergrass system, a serious own goal for British governance in the North at the time. |
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Still, Stanley is small fry in the realm of corporate governance and executive compensation fiascos. |
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If governments fail to deliver improvements in governance, they will lose aid. |
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Europe's bourses were rocked, and shareholders realized more than ever that bad governance costs them money. |
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The Tigers have shelved a demand for a separate homeland in favor of a federal system of governance. |
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I am not optimistic about the near-term futures of corporate governance and corporate reporting in America. |
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The quality of political leadership and the system of governance is key to development. |
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Fox-hunters are among those groups who subscribe to the social contract of democratic, consensual governance. |
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The era of the privately-run family dynasties in Australian media is over, and the era of benign governance of the ABC is over. |
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In the United Kingdom the emergence of clinical governance is greatly changing paediatric urology. |
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By next spring that mood may grow a good deal more impatient to try out this promised new era of good governance sooner rather than later. |
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Its governance structure would be bottom-up, power ultimately based on sovereign individuals. |
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Leaders have offered the people little but venal, corrupt governance for decades. |
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All I care about are the improvements in governance and oversight that are taking place. |
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Since the 1980s, however, a wide spectrum of Latin American opinion has come to recognize the value of democratic governance. |
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But, again, the vested interests of political parties prevailed over the needs of governance. |
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This bumptious charlatan then presumes to lecture others on issues of morality and governance. |
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Sure he is the overseer of local governance, but he should set it up to run smoothly, and then keep his finger out of it. |
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First, the overall mode of state functioning, policymaking, and governance is top-down, nontransparent, and rigidly hierarchical. |
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They focus on improving governance and management through those clusters of teachers. |
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While the success of government hinges largely on programming, governance depends on relationship building. |
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He has been slowly hijacking the machinery of government and developing parallel non-democratic governance structures. |
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It is part of the good governance that is required to ensure the security of the fiscal base. |
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She issues a clarion call for accountability at the top of corporations and better corporate governance. |
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Very few countries and societies have come close to achieving good governance in its totality. |
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Corporate data governance is in the process of moving from de rigueur to de facto to de jure. |
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The university relations officer works to represent students on all matters pertaining to governance of the university. |
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Its work provides a model for future governance of the church, one in which the hierarchy will not only listen to, but also trust, the laity. |
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It may be, in fact, the impossibility of omnicompetence that makes democracy the only viable choice for a system of governance. |
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We can definitely find a modern and progressive form of governance by staying on course towards the right. |
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Big changes in corporate governance are already in the works as the stock exchanges demand new, independent boards of directors. |
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In other words, to ensure good governance where all are treated equally and justly. |
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They also documented the expanding threat of coercive governance as a critique of this Orwellian age. |
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I think our corporate governance has structurally been on the improve, but activism has always been part of our DNA anyway. |
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Corporate governance watchers said the ouster of independent directors is unusual and merited an inquiry. |
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One shrewd participant insisted that the solution is leadership not governance. |
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General patterns of corporate governance are evolving and practices in Europe may tend to coalesce. |
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Some regions of China, looking for creative ways to improve local governance, have already experimented with the idea. |
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He found more substance in and need for a federal system of governance in India. |
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Ariola, who is no longer cold, but is free with her kisses, is told that her period of amorous governance is almost finished. |
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Trusts which are anxious to show their governance credentials will identify innovators as low risk targets for attention. |
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A major obstacle to good governance is the entrenched lack of accountability within the government. |
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All they needed to do was simply throw the principles of good governance and prudential banking regulations out of the window. |
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They remain under-represented in every branch of governance, a discontented lot. |
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Beyond that, I also said that assets such as forestry and fish are now being steered and managed by Maori governance. |
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The time for a new partnership in the art of governance has become even more important given the stakes. |
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It had no direction, no vision, and no mechanism for either governance or management. |
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Though legal, such interlocking directorates are not exactly good corporate governance. |
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The result is a framework for the governance of the continental economy that curtails domestic powers of popularly elected government. |
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The first looks at sustainable development and good governance and notes the corrosive effect of corruption. |
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Fitzgerald is promising a tough new visible policy on corporate governance. |
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The presence of a controlling shareholder is a prominent feature of corporate governance. |
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All primary care practitioners will have to develop systems for clinical governance. |
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Good governance practices by co-ops will help avoid such scandals, he advised. |
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I'm not smart enough to do crossword puzzles, so I'm very involved in the politics and governance of this place. |
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These are powerful men convinced of their own entitlement to bounty and governance. |
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Courts should have a major role in fighting corruption and improving governance. |
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The basis of good governance is fair and equitable representation of all stakeholders. |
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The reforms, however, should focus on improving the transparency of the exchange's operations and governance rather than imposing new rules. |
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The first indication of governance would be in the initiation or continuance of policies on infrastructure. |
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One of the main reasons for the growing demand for global governance is the increasing globalization of business activity. |
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This happens when the leadership of a nation neglected interior governance and stressed external affairs. |
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If the bishop is the final word on governance in his diocese, then he can openly defy the Pope in matters of governance. |
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For Bosch and many big professional investment institutions, good governance adds to the bottom line of creating shareholder wealth. |
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This, combined with poor prospects for economic gain by the British, resulted in a de facto abdication of many responsibilities of governance. |
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Greeks like Aristotle, who opposed atomism, equated it with a blind desire to abnegate the governance of Nature in favour of pure chance. |
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Surely, the lesson's that no player is bigger than the game, and that it's the fans who dictate the governance of sport, not the other way round. |
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Both actors compete for public support and governance becomes a contested arena. |
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After 15 years, the executive as the source of political leadership ought to seek the actualisation of these outputs of democratic governance. |
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The importance placed by the public on administration and governance can also be seen in Donald Tsang's very high public poll numbers. |
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The problems of corporate governance are about much more than rapacious egotism. |
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What if there were two global systems of governance, and they weren't based on control of the landscape? |
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This experience fostered broad exposure to the nursing association congress and how it relates to the governance of the association. |
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Risk management and evidence based medicine are keystones of clinical governance. |
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Many faculty see shared governance as window dressing for rather dictatorial rule. |
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They have seen good governance, they have seen delivery on promises, and they have seen a leader whom we are proud of. |
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At the same time, Europe and America must redouble their efforts to strengthen the imperfect but necessary system of international governance. |
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For example, it has linked economic reform and structural adjustment to what it has termed good governance. |
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As is sadly typical of social democratic governance today, Jospin's government offered reformism without real reforms. |
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We have handed over governance of this country to the private fiefdoms of the unions, the lawyers and the lobbyists. |
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On Africa, for example, world leaders must not stumble over labyrinthine arguments concerning trade versus aid or governance and conditionality. |
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Mechanisms to regulate competition among firms that conduct business transactions are intrinsic to every market governance system. |
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Also, the kind of good governance needed for a long term regional vision was lacking. |
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The corporate governance inspection report said we had to put our house in order. |
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Institutional shareholders have more recently renewed a campaign for enhanced corporate governance. |
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Mrs Charity said one test for good governance in areas needing aid was zero tolerance of corruption. |
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I also sit on the board of our global organization and its governance committee. |
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The table gives the main roles and responsibilities for research governance. |
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If ever there was an opportunity to address the antiquated system of BBC funding and governance, this is it. |
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Throughout American history, the family has been seen as the linchpin of the social order and the basis for stable governance. |
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Second, was liberal democracy or autocracy the future for the governance of mankind's common affairs? |
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The unwritten guiding premise of governance today is majoritarian supremacy in the form of Hindu theocracy. |
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In fact, academe's characteristic mode of governance magnifies majoritarian power. |
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The old corrupt systems of governance and tax evasion in this country and many others are rapidly crumbling. |
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Humanity faces a global crisis in the governance of knowledge, technology and culture. |
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In some cases, the law has made IT managers legally responsible for adherence to corporate governance rules. |
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They are reluctant to cancel debt if the country in question does not have good governance or a credible government. |
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The ombudsman commission was established under a presidential decree in 2000 in a bid to help promote good governance. |
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We also need a greater understanding of corporate governance within the whole ecosystem. |
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Network governance is found in the most complex and dynamic industries like fashion textiles, movie making, electronics and biotechnology. |
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He acknowledged the need for improved budgeting and fiscal federacy as prerequisites for good governance. |
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The law and order scenario in a society can, generally, be used as a barometer of good governance and social health. |
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They must also ensure that high standards of corporate governance and personal behaviour are maintained. |
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After a first year of finding their feet, the parliamentary committees are well placed to make key contributions to Scotland's governance. |
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Being a champion of governance reform, the President should move with resolve and conviction. |
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Not enough party leaders and members sufficiently shared the president's declared values and governance direction. |
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Much of modern health care is team based, with the doctor one element in a wider system of clinical governance. |
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There are big issues of governance, debt, aid, trade and development that will have to be addressed once the immediate crisis management is over. |
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Equally worrying, the board structure dictated by co-determination saps good governance. |
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Good governance and management of finances is surely key to keeping the debt crisis at bay. |
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It fell down on information governance, MRSA rates and its stroke unit facilities. |
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Programs to improve financial transparency, corporate governance and debt reduction were hard to find. |
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I don't think he's a very nice guy, I would not like to live under his governance. |
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For the first time, we are hearing of fresh concepts and ideas that will sustain a new system of governance. |
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In its haste to achieve this end it seems to be taking short cuts, many of which appear to raise serious issues of governance. |
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To guard against corruption, those countries will use a system of peer review to monitor deployment of funds and progress toward good governance. |
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Again, the differentiation between governance, management, and tutorage to the pupils is something that we have to differentiate. |
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It wasn't a victory for liberty, only a transition from one tyranny to another, because ANY system of governance is, to some extent, tyrannical. |
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The first purpose, citizen participation in governance, falls into the sovereign realms. |
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The real sting in the new Bill when it was finally gazetted was the attack on the organisations concerned with human rights and governance. |
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In December this year, the British Council will bring 200 parliamentarians and staff to the Chamber to debate governance in today's world. |
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Benevolent autocracy is an uncertain foundation for legitimate and sustainable national governance. |
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One can conclude that European regional governance is likely to develop further in multilevel and asymmetrical directions. |
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In the US the realisation seems to be dawning that this episode represents, at the very least, a case of maladministration, of desperately poor governance. |
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The designs on the shield of Achilles, in Book XVIII of the Iliad, contrast scenes of peace and harmonious governance, harvest and the vintage with scenes of war and battle. |
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As long as they abide by their own internal rules of governance, the secular society imposes no meddling restrictions. |
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In 1993, the military eased its grip and offered a transition to civilian governance. |
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She has grandiosely announced that the National Advisory Council headed by her will monitor the implementation of the Government's governance charter. |
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Indeed, I am gratified that he condescended to address one of three seminal questions which I directed in response to his treatise on electoral systems and good governance. |
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These withholders contend the current system of church governance is unjust and that to change it one must engage in a political struggle for control. |
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The multilateral governance system remains largely unreformed and apparently immune to changes in business practice. |
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Therefore, reforming this trade is part of a comprehensive strategy, including regional governance reforms, to help end the war. |
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This means that women are perfectly able to act in matters of governance. |
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He was easily distracted from regional politics and domestic governance. |
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He calls instead, in effect, for a return to traditional governance, with its checks and balances and its clear demarcations between officials and politicians. |
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The institutions of political and social governance provide a husk of functionality and mask these problems for those that do not wish to see, or do not care. |
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The wanton and deliberate demolition of the Babri Masjid by the Hindu fundamentalist forces in December 1992 was a watershed in the governance of the country. |
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The book rejects capitalism, market mechanisms, and even, seemingly, profit motives and corporate governance. |
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But it is definitive of American governance today and the social psychology behind it. |
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This afternoon MPs will vote on the third reading of the constitutional renewal and governance bill amended to offer a national referendum on the alternative vote. |
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The attendees, who included John Adams and George Washington, set about forming a plan of governance for the new nation. |
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Failing to do so contributes to corrupt governance, and could contribute to share underperformance, something a prudent investor should wish to avoid. |
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It has recently ruled over the country with an iron fist, increasingly solidifying its noose on civil rights and governance. |
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It is no longer feasible to convince the multitudes to expect little from their leaders, now that they have learned of international standards of governance. |
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Everything in life, from governance to harvest to warfare, was suffused with sacred meaning until the advent of the enlightenment. |
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The skit also implies that executive orders are a new aspect of governance. |
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At the outset of the 21st century, the world finds itself in a transitional phase between the modern nation-state system and postmodern forms of global governance. |
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On governance, Mbeki said the restructuring of the government was still continuing, and additional steps would be taken to rightsize the public service. |
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Indeed, blaming bad local governance and the existence of corrupt middlemen is like concluding that our sleeveens and gombeen-men of the 1840s were responsible for the Famine. |
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But while the obstacles to evidence-based governance are formidable, they are not insurmountable. |
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But without a reasonable expectation that security will materialize, better governance will not germinate. |
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While not all 86 million maintain positions of governance or public service, the Party's machinery runs on watchmaker precision. |
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The former believed in the role of the state as a provider, while the latter favored an iron fist approach to governance. |
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He pledged that governance is going to be a key focus of the Republican Senate. |
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They accuse universities of being inflexible, inefficient, and unaccountable, and they view the tenure system as an impediment to effective university governance. |
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The Brotherhood left no choice for the whole rest of society, united, to reject their governance. |
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Good governance is lacking in most countries that are unable to promote job creation, engage in productive public spending and to stimulate economic growth. |
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A good overall education program should promote understanding of the cooperative's character, governance, finances, policies, operations and market position. |
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Darrell West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution, concurs. |
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So will letting Rebecca and Rhonda get hitched paralyze republican governance in the United States in some similar way? |
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You small-mindedly assume that without the governance of an imaginary sky cop, a person will just naturally fall into self-serving, pleasure-seeking, negative behaviour. |
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There is simply no question that getting some form of constitutionalism and some form of democratic governance would be better for the vast majority of non-democracies. |
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It is not only increasingly making the governance of the country impossible, but is increasingly corroding the moral infrastructure of our society itself. |
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Good governance would mean sticks and coal for too many of our favorite politicians. |
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The plan offers a package of trade and aid initiatives for Africa, coupled with help to end civil wars and improve governance across the continent. |
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So to the extent that we give up powers to EU institutions, we are giving up democracy itself, and consigning our governance to people we did not elect and cannot remove. |
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The participation in, and recognition of, democratically elected local Baha'i governance, brings Baha'is into alignment with the national and globalized authority structures. |
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The Bush Doctrine recognized the pitfalls of condoning authoritarian governance in exchange for an illusory promise of stability. |
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But for those Scotsmen and Irishmen who were firmly inside, rather than on the fringes of, the Hanoverian state, the new system of governance had a great deal to offer. |
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Sticking to his set speech he orated on governance and standards. |
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He writes extensively on corporate strategy, executive compensation and governance, business design and integrative thinking. |
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Corruption deters investment, hinders socio-economic development, undermines good governance, and distorts government policy thus leading to misallocation of resources. |
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Plantations, slave revolts, colonial governance, the insular existence, the sea, hurricanes, and many other elements contributed to the cultural synthesis. |
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Hamill's system is a formula for church governance that enshrines caution. |
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Was the Senate an irrelevance in the governance of the empire? |
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One of the key principles in corporate governance practice is to properly segregate the powers for decision-making, execution and independent monitoring and challenge. |
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News sources are contradictory and no effective municipal governance exists to provide people with the information they need. |
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Elaine Kamarck, a fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution, wondered if their jobs pose a conflict of interest. |
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Nothing, it seems, will budge them from their opposition to give-and-take of governance. |
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He is a general practice principal in Glasgow and serves on several council committees, including the governance working group, of which he is the chairman. |
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As for the regional government, policy support is needed in the form of regional regulations, synchronized with the positive values of nagari governance. |
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He also addresses the matter of Baptist ecclesiology and governance. |
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In addition to the more traditional skills such as governance experts, economists, jurists and so on, it requires a variety of professional skills. |
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The institutions and mechanisms of governance of African states are often no longer separable from the international mechanisms of governance with which they are engaged. |
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It preferred these short-cut means to the more toilsome efforts of building up a base through good governance, social reforms and ideological education of the cadres. |
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I think that's a fair comment on my governance style across the board. |
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And in feudal states, plutocrats with the greatest wealth owned the apparatus of governance and held absolute control over the lives of average people. |
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This was a daring and optimistic bet on what in the context was a largely new form of governance, coming to life and being tested under conditions that were hardly propitious. |
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Theresa Spence was elected chief of Attawapiskat in 2010, after long service in other governance positions. |
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In the long run, we pay an even heavier price by galvanizing opponents bent on freeing themselves from what they perceive as elitist disrespect for democratic governance. |
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In the old days when this was the civic centre for the community, the police were in this building as part of a large representation of local governance. |
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Promoting good governance, transparence and accountability involves putting in place mechanisms that enhance and guarantee the quality of public services. |
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Shareholder groups are increasingly important as challengers of irresponsible corporate governance, but there is an ironic and dangerous vicious circle here. |
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However they will be on probation for a number of years while shortfalls in their economies, governance and legal systems are ironed out and brought up to EU standards. |
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Then, as governor of Texas, he was graced with a pliable enough bipartisan Legislature, and the Legislature is where the real work in that state's governance gets done. |
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But this governance exercise quickly degenerated into a cash grab exercise, when deficit and debt reduction became the categorical imperative. |
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The United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system of governance. |
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But he does not have a role in the governance of Wales, even though his title might suggest that he does. |
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He made arrangements for the governance of England in early 1067 before returning to Normandy. |
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Edward's authority was weakened by poor governance and defeat by the Scots at the Battle of Bannockburn. |
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Following this achievement Thomas took little part in the governance of the realm and instead retreated to Pontefract Castle. |
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This time, a more diverse group of settlers was sent, including some entire families, under the governance of John White. |
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The end of Charles's independent governance came when he attempted to apply the same religious policies in Scotland. |
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The State Opening of Parliament is a ceremony loaded with historical ritual and symbolic significance for the governance of the United Kingdom. |
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Therefore, the State Opening demonstrates the governance of the United Kingdom but also the separation of powers. |
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In 1683, he became the governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, but did not take an active role in its governance. |
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The United Kingdom and the other Commonwealth realms are all constitutional monarchies in the Westminster tradition of constitutional governance. |
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The governance of England featured in the 2015 general election manifestos of the three major political parties. |
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It proposes a separate English rate of Income Tax and rejects regional governance in England. |
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The Louisiana political and legal structure has maintained several elements from the times of French and Spanish governance. |
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The review brought forward the Government's plans to alter the structure of regional governance in England known as the Single Regional Strategy. |
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The term Greater London has been and still is used to describe different areas in governance, statistics, history and common parlance. |
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Principal councils have the power to make a community governance review at any time for all or part of their district. |
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According to the World Bank, poor governance, corruption and weak public institutions are major challenges for Bangladesh's development. |
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Justice within Inuit culture was moderated by the form of governance that gave significant power to the elders. |
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The term Holy See refers not to the Vatican state but to the Pope's spiritual and pastoral governance, largely exercised through the Roman Curia. |
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Congregationalists also differed with the Reformed churches using episcopalian church governance, which is usually led by a bishop. |
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The structure of northern universities tended to be modeled after the system of faculty governance developed at the University of Paris. |
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In the 16th century the Reformation brought about changes in the governance of the cathedrals as discussed below. |
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Only in law and governance was the Italic nature of Rome's accretive culture supreme. |
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Nature has placed mankind under the governance of two sovereign masters, pain and pleasure. |
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The ICC is responsible for the organisation and governance of cricket's major international tournaments, notably the Cricket World Cup. |
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During the 2009 season of Formula One, the sport was gripped in a governance crisis. |
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Dissatisfaction with the governance of the sport led, in 1895, to a number of prominent clubs establishing what would become rugby league. |
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The establishment of the Welsh Office effectively created the basis for the territorial governance of Wales. |
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Though the G20's primary focus is global economic governance, the themes of its summits vary from year to year. |
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This made the Company a part of British governance, but administration of British India remained the responsibility Company officers. |
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Bruno Wenn of the German DEG recommends to provide a sound economic policymaking and good governance to attract new investors. |
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The executive is the organ exercising authority in and holding responsibility for the governance of a state. |
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By increasing the efficiency of the labour force it create better conditions for good governance, improving health and enhancing equality. |
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Many states in Mexico lack policies that establish stability in governance. |
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People from Cape Breton have also achieved a number of firsts in Canadian politics and governance. |
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Presbyterian governance is practised by Presbyterian denominations and also by many other Reformed churches. |
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This theory of governance developed in Geneva under John Calvin and was introduced to Scotland by John Knox after his period of exile in Geneva. |
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The polity of the Church in Wales is episcopal church governance, which is the same as other Anglican churches. |
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This terminated both state support and parliament's role in its governance, but also took into government ownership much church property. |
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The polity of the Church of Ireland is episcopal church governance, as in other Anglican churches. |
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This was often to comply with secular governance issues or to offer a directory of attendees for internal use. |
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The 2017 charter abolished the BBC Trust and replaced it with external regulation by Ofcom, with governance by the BBC Board. |
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The Scottish Football Association encourages quality of governance in football clubs through a system of club licence awards. |
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Finally, government is also sometimes used in English as a synonym for governance. |
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Every country in the world is ruled by a system of governance that combines at least three or more political or economic attributes. |
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Saudi Arabia has undergone a process of political and social reform, such as to increase public transparency and good governance. |
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Institutional capacity and governance in the sector are weak, reflecting general characteristics of the public sector in Saudi Arabia. |
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Somalis have well developed pastoral culture where complete system of life and governance has been refined. |
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An authoritarian military junta came to power in 1964 and ruled until 1985, after which civilian governance resumed. |
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The Czech Republic also ranks as the 6th most peaceful country, while achieving strong performance in democratic governance. |
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Reforms since 1998 have markedly increased the DPR's role in national governance. |
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Scone at this point played a crucial role in the formation and governance of the ancient Kingdom of Alba and later Kingdom of Scotland. |
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Similarly, Nicholson described Robert's reign as deficient and that his lack of the skills of governance led to internal strife. |
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There is also a clear separation between governance and executive administration. |
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Local governance was brought into line with that of the rest of Great Britain. |
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Supporters of FPTP argue that it is the electoral method providing the best governance. |
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Following the union of Scotland with England, the government began bringing Scotland's local governance into line with the rest of Great Britain. |
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Today, Belgium is a federal constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system of governance. |
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The creation of administration devolution effectively defined the territorial governance of modern Wales. |
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The Gorsedd holds the right of proclamation and of governance while the Council organises the event. |
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The government issued the Charter of the Forest, which attempted to reform the royal governance of the forests. |
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Lancaster refused to meet with Edward in parliament for the next two years, bringing effective governance to a standstill. |
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On 11 February 2011, the Shortridge Report on corporate governance was made public. |
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It is concerned with the governance of and relationship between Northern Ireland and Great Britain. |
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The overlapping governance networks of panarchy have facilitated a context conducive to the above competing multilateralisms. |
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Water governance is the set of formal and informal processes through which decisions related to water management are made. |
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Good water governance is primarily about knowing what processes work best in a particular physical and socioeconomic context. |
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The direct participation of the royal and viceroyal figures in areas of governance is limited. |
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Various marzeh societies developed into elite fraternities, becoming very influential in the commercial trade and governance of Tyre. |
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In local government, a sui generis entity is one which does not fit with the general scheme of local governance of a country. |
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Before November 2012 the Devon and Cornwall Police Authority was the police governance. |
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Indeed, volunteers can have a strong influence on organisations especially those who deal with governance and management. |
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From then on, its governance was entrusted to wardens as representatives of the crown. |
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Titles of nobility became symbolic along with a stipend while governance of the country shifted to scholar officials. |
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Upon the islands' Christianisation, the datus retained governance of their territories despite annexation to the Spanish Empire. |
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The deepening of the spiritual life was later to be seen as central to public policy and royal governance. |
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By 930, the chieftains had established a form of governance, the Althing, making it one of the world's oldest parliaments. |
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The direct governance of the Reichsgut no longer matched the needs of either the king or the dukes. |
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The founding territories retained their separate governance codes and laws. |
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During their governance of the Kingdom of Hispania, the Visigoths built several churches that survive. |
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By the 12th century, most European political thinkers agreed that monarchy was the ideal form of governance. |
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Those who oppose global governance typically do so on objections that the idea is unfeasible, inevitably oppressive, or simply unnecessary. |
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In general, these opponents are wary of the concentration of power or wealth that such governance might represent. |
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In October 2007 Lisbon hosted the 2007 EU Summit, where agreement was reached regarding a new EU governance model. |
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Mauritius is ranked high in terms of economic competitiveness, a friendly investment climate, good governance and a free economy. |
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Besides assisting in the governance of the city and first Portuguese coinage, he provided the junks for several diplomatic missions. |
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The ruling in favour of UBC also sets precedence on the matter of bicameral governance for universities and colleges. |
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At the time, the administration and governance of port were very supportive of economic growth. |
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Under a charter from the company in 1618, a new model of governance was put in place in 1619, which created a new House of Burgesses. |
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The VOC shareholders were the pioneers in laying the basis for modern corporate governance and corporate finance. |
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The governance of the NEP has developed considerably in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. |
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Under Norwegian governance, the archipelago was named Svalbard in 1925, the main island becoming Spitsbergen. |
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This would be the impetus behind the later Han synthesis incorporating the more moderate schools of political governance. |
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They were civil servants appointed by the Emperor to handle daily governance. |
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He set 1990 as the official deadline for a return to democratic governance. |
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This, however, should not be confused with the name of the church itself, as it is a distinct body relating to church governance. |
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Many German Lutherans appear to demur on this issue, which may be sourced in the church governance views of Martin Luther. |
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Other Lutheran Churches seem indifferent as a matter of understood doctrine regarding this particular issue of ecclesiastical governance. |
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It works to promote and enhance the participation of the laity in the governance and general affairs of the Church. |
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The United States Constitution has been a notable model for governance around the world. |
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