It was proposed to organise the whole state structure in the manner of a system of chambers of conciliation. |
|
He says it is a well-established norm that conciliation is part of administration of justice. |
|
Global or regional organizations may provide good offices, mediation, or conciliation for states involved in environmental disputes. |
|
A new conciliation program for victims of conjugal violence is greeted with skepticism on the part of social workers. |
|
The two sides met for five hours at the London headquarters of the conciliation service Acas, far longer than had been expected. |
|
The workers acted in defiance of a Labor Ministry order for mandatory conciliation. |
|
The politics of consensus and conciliation gave way to the politics of confrontation and intrigue. |
|
He was a competent experienced man with unusual gifts of conciliation and tact. |
|
Be prepared for continued barbs, even as the individuals appear to be reaching a tentative conciliation. |
|
In fact, Chavez's first messages upon returning to power were of conciliation. |
|
The tone of conciliation was not matched by some of her supporters gathered in front of her. |
|
They refuse to see that the social conciliation preached by the prophet hardly survived his death. |
|
Europe's heads of state are continuing their policy of conciliation with the Bush administration in the aftermath of the US invasion of Iraq. |
|
He opposed any measures of conciliation for the American colonies, voting against the repeal of the Stamp Act. |
|
From the milieu of the nobility itself there arise preachers of conciliation. |
|
On the verge of tears, his victory speech was a model of Churchillian conciliation. |
|
Not surprisingly, such line-drawing tends to discourage rather than promote conciliation. |
|
Instead of dialogue and conciliation between independent states, under the Roman imperium there was only the alternative of obedience or revolt. |
|
Selig's power base among the owners is built on a record of consensus and conciliation, not damn-the-torpedoes, full-speed-ahead action. |
|
They bring a sense of confrontation rather then conciliation, belligerence rather than humility and gracelessness rather than gracefulness. |
|
|
The issue has already hit the Australian Industrial Relations Commission where conciliation attempts have failed. |
|
Thus conciliation made a recognizable difference to the content of Community legislation. |
|
In all cases the employers sought the certificates before exhausting all conciliation and arbitration remedies available. |
|
Management and unions meet today at the Labour Relations Court for conciliation talks on the planned 500-job redundancy package. |
|
Section 103 with the completion of the conciliation proceedings and the exercise of conciliation powers. |
|
Depending on the mandate in specific cases, conciliation can thus vary from a form of institutionalized negotiation to something akin to non-binding arbitration. |
|
Your Honour referred to the Workplace Relations Act as being a significant departure from history in terms of the delineation between conciliation and arbitration. |
|
An inaugural moment in history steeped in a new language of Hope and Change and conciliation. |
|
We are not afraid of searching out a durable compromise through a sensible conciliation process. |
|
Parliament has a number of concerns, particularly regarding the advisory role of the legal profession, and a conciliation procedure is likely. |
|
The conciliation office consists of an employee and an employer who chair the office on a rota basis. |
|
The conciliation process has been exhausted and discussions are currently stalled. |
|
But we ended up investing these radical liberals with a leftist character they do not have, falling into a pattern of opportunist conciliation. |
|
Additionally, limitations have been placed on the right to repudiate by strengthening conciliation and mediation mechanisms. |
|
The legislature is making increasing use of conciliation so as to ensure the swiftness and efficiency of the judicial machinery. |
|
Should conciliation fail, the parties could then enter into mediation. |
|
Some hope Mr Zenawi, in a gesture of conciliation, will free some of his opponents from jail before then. |
|
So may the Dalai Lama's recent admission that his efforts at conciliation have failed. |
|
If this year's conciliation is anything like last year's then I for one have no desire to attend. |
|
The conciliation commission shall take its decisions by majority vote of its members. |
|
|
It was the first failure of the conciliation procedure since its extension granted by the Treaty of Amsterdam. |
|
If the attempt at conciliation fails, the Ombudsman can make recommendations to solve the case. |
|
We are consequently at the disposal of all those who seek to resolve conflicts and achieve conciliation. |
|
There are any number of procedures at present, ranging from mere conciliation to more complex legal procedures. |
|
Alternatively or, if necessary following conciliation, the parties may agree to arbitration. |
|
The conciliation procedure is also foreseen to take place in front a judge sitting alone. |
|
When the charter is understood to be inflexible on a given point, opportunities for conciliation are suspended. |
|
The Minister of State may also refer the matter to the conciliation committee of his own initiative. |
|
A conciliation commission shall be created upon the request of one of the parties to the dispute. |
|
The meeting in the besieged palace ended nevertheless in conciliation. |
|
Up from Slavery is a compelling literary event because Washington successfully weds his rags-to-riches story with narratives of racial conciliation and uplift. |
|
Our conciliation process avoids an overly legalistic approach. |
|
The behaviour of the two institutions under co-decision is illustrated in Exhibit 5.1, a chronology of the working time directive in conciliation. |
|
Definitively, a labourist ideology will have its bases in the trade union movement and see conciliation and arbitration as the most beneficial means of industrial relations. |
|
Damage caused by measures taken in excess of the Convention must be compensated, and disputes are subject to compulsory conciliation and arbitration. |
|
We also offer a conciliation service in disputes over accessibility. |
|
Daschle, who epitomized political cowardice and conciliation, was a fitting symbol of the Democratic Party's prostration before the Bush administration and the ultra-right. |
|
As Council representatives are here, I say to you: dress warmly for this conciliation. |
|
Usually, during the conciliation process I would ask the person at fault to admit it and ask forgiveness. |
|
Case 2: you have already received notification to appear before the local Labour Office for monocratic conciliation. |
|
|
During an inspection, the inspector may suggest that the employer and worker reach a monocratic conciliation agreement. |
|
Although I endorse the outcome of the conciliation procedure, I make no bones about the fact that I am not satisfied. |
|
We have as yet to be convinced of the usefulness of this conciliation body. |
|
We wrote a conciliation paper stating the complaint was a false statement and that she shouldn't tell lies or complain anymore. |
|
I hope that they will not be the sacrificial lamb of the conciliation procedure. |
|
As I write, Morsi has only hours to meet the military deadline, but he shows no signs of conciliation. |
|
Any sign of an impulse toward moderation or conciliation will only hurt Pawlenty with this crowd. |
|
We have tried to do too much, too fast, with the threat of conciliation and enlargement used as the big stick to knock us into line. |
|
In another way, we are witnessing a mix of collective emotionality, momentary communication and effortless conciliation. |
|
The report no longer mentioned the possibility of good offices or a conciliation mission. |
|
In these countries, the primary aim of customary law is conciliation and dispute, reconciliation between the wronged and the wrongdoer. |
|
Another possibility is victim-offender conciliation where victims meet a group of unassociated offenders. |
|
Victim-offender conciliation brings offenders and unassociated victims together as a group to vent their feelings. |
|
Commendably enough, the joint resolution presses for actual international attempts at ethnic conciliation and cooperation within Kosovo. |
|
My task is to thumbprint the letter of promise drafted by the village chief when I attend a conciliation meeting as a witness. |
|
Cases that the Commission decided to defer, deal with, refer to conciliation, stand down, return to officer or reconsider. |
|
After applying for conciliation, the union extended what it considered to be an olive branch. |
|
It is the reflex of empathy, understanding and conciliation that prevents contradiction from degenerating into conflict. |
|
The provisions of article 5 in respect of two-party conciliation also apply, mutatis mutandis, to multiparty conciliation. |
|
A conciliation procedure is not a walkover, and I know from experience that you never come from one with a full bag of goodies. |
|
|
I therefore hope that conciliation will offer us deadlines for a rapid end to an affair which we all, I repeat, want to bring to a close, but in accordance with Community law. |
|
In the first place, analysis shows that a mediation or conciliation clause of this type entails an obligation to produce a result, but solely as regards the actual implementation of the procedure. |
|
I said then that pledging support to the Macedonian Government and condemning so-called extremists would not lead to the search for solutions, peace and conciliation, but to the encouragement of violence. |
|
You can always seek assistance from the CGIL at the monocratic conciliation, in order to make sure that the settlement is correct and be counselled as to the possible legal action that can be taken as opposed to conciliation. |
|
The conciliation is referred to as monocratic, because the presence of the trade union is not compulsory, and therefore, only the Ministry officer is present with the worker and employer. |
|
His Excellency called in his speech for the edification of a new tolerant world where the values of conciliation and the culture of justice and peace prevail, thanks to the improvement of the quality of education. |
|
From this point of view, the conciliation that has been achieved moderates the more radical proposals without, however, discounting a future opening-up of the market to passenger rail transport. |
|
A conciliation settlement is not an admission of guilt by either party. |
|
On this dossier the Council not only failed to even consider compromise or indeed conciliation, but arrogantly set about accusing Parliament of putting passenger security at risk. |
|
I also hope that, if we vote as one tomorrow, the Council will have second thoughts and will want to join with us in finding a solution through the conciliation procedure. |
|
It was depressing to hear in the corridors that the Commission's legal service has refused to accept the outcome of the conciliation or has tried to misinterpret it. |
|
I would, though, also like to come to an understanding in the course of the conciliation procedure as regards how decisions may be taken in future to achieve greater financial security. |
|
At that point, it became possible to establish a comparison with the views of the authority figure conducting the conciliation, to better understand the mechanisms of the process and to evaluate its effectiveness. |
|
The Commission reacted to such a statement considering that it affects its right of initiative making a statement for the record of the conciliation committee. |
|
Permanent and the conciliation of beneficiaries as well as their selection according to the sternness of their is nation on the banes of social enquires and at the decision of the local City Council. |
|
The conciliation procedure for the legislation on tachographs will be brought to a close sometime this autumn, and there would be little point in having a regulation that cannot be applied. |
|
The Union notes the truce established between President Patasse and representatives of the mutineers following the conciliation mission carried out by four African Heads of State after the France-Africa summit in Ouagadougou. |
|
I would also like to thank our Vice-President Mr Vidal-Quadras Roca, who conducted the conciliation proceedings with a firm hand, and Mr Tziorkas, the official responsible for our case. |
|
After eight months of negotiation, including conciliation and three rounds of mediation, and after eleven weeks of job action, the parties remain far apart on key issues. |
|
Here, I am not referring to the main headline of enlargement, but to the work done over many months with this Parliament on conciliation, which was perhaps hidden from view by the preparations for enlargement. |
|
|
But conciliation is constitutionally anathema to such fanatics. |
|
Both nations are balancing threats with offers of conciliation. |
|
In cases where the Commission had asked to see the complaint again at the end of the conciliation, the Commission will take a second look at the case. |
|
Today, though, at third reading, we can permit ourselves some self-congratulation, because the conciliation procedure was, I have to say, difficult. |
|
With the courtesy that one nation knows for another, the Greeks have trodden a path of conciliation over anger, placation over rancour, humour over hostility. |
|
In the absence of such an agreement within six months following the first request to open the procedure of conciliation, the dispute may be submitted to arbitration at the request of one of the parties. |
|
Politics, and especially mobility politics, are increasingly becoming a conciliation procedure in which one must listen, discuss and convince before deciding. |
|
Women first entered the judiciary in 1975 and they work in the civil, criminal and commercial justice systems and in courts of all levels, from the courts of conciliation to the courts of first instance, appeal and cassation. |
|
As a conciliation commissioner, he was given the mandate to investigate a dispute between the three railways that make up the bulk of the rail industry in Canada and its unions. |
|
In conciliation could I ask you to make allowance for these farmers who have invested in cleaning up the environment by installing incinerators, and for whom the cost would be excessive should they not be able to continue. |
|
The village chief held two conciliation meetings of no avail. |
|
The Board also provides mediation and conciliation services to help parties resolve differences without resorting to formal proceedings before the Board. |
|
It is a question of due respect for the State but also, in the final reckoning, a question of strengthening the credibility and the range of the accords reached through conciliation. |
|
This may be a result of the fact that conciliation is not necessarily binding on the parties, leading to the perception that the process adds little value. |
|
They typically had little interest in politics and sought conciliation rather than war or they withheld judgment from both sides. |
|
If there is a disagreement between them, it is taken to a conciliation committee as it is for legislative proposals. |
|
If the joint conciliation text is not approved, the Parliament may adopt the budget definitively. |
|
It was a policy of outward conciliation, while masking his own consolidation of authority. |
|
Any regulations amending this Regulation shall be adopted by the Council after recourse to the conciliation procedure, if the European Parliament or the Council so requests. |
|
But now to the points that will be at the centre of the conciliation. |
|
|
I welcome the final outcome of the conciliation procedure, in which the European Parliament was able to impose its views, for example applying the three-decibel noise emission allowance to all engine types. |
|
His lawyers said that he was too ill to attend. In an act of conciliation towards both China and the former rulers of Taiwan, the Kuomintang, the new president of Taiwan chose a member of the KMT as his prime minister. |
|
In their tactics they are as likely to try killing the DPJ through conciliation as much as confrontation. As for the new government's liberalising bent, it is too soon to write Mr Fukuda off. |
|
The Secretary-General shall provide the new conciliator with the evidence, including statements and materials, collected during the course of the conciliation proceedings. |
|
Madam President, I would like to thank the Council and Commission for a useful and thorough conciliation procedure and one that was good-tempered all round, which is not always the case. |
|
Her note of conciliation helped lift prices of Argentine bonds. |
|
Parliament reiterated its suggestion during a three-way dialogue that took place halfway through the Portuguese Presidency and concluded with an agreement at the first conciliation presided over by France in July. |
|
Initiation of such proceedings is not of itself to be regarded as a waiver of the agreement to conciliate or as a termination of the conciliation proceedings. |
|
And so, through European approaches to conciliation built on mutual interest, as well as on common values, we can arrive at solutions that will create an all-inclusive society where no one is a loser. |
|
It consists of the Supreme Court of 20 permanent judges and a Chief Justice, appellate courts, city and district courts, and conciliation councils. |
|
The conciliation service, Acas, will convene a meeting between the carrier and the unions today in a bid to break the deadlock and get talks back on track. |
|
In 1890 it was South Australian Premier Charles Cameron Kingston who first proposed a system of compulsory conciliation and arbitration to deal with industrial unrest. |
|
It also banned the NLRB from engaging in any mediation or conciliation, and formally enshrined in law the ban on hiring personnel to do economic data collection or analysis. |
|