Cybersecurity

Popular 2000s TV Show Bracing For Reboot

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Latin America   来源:Markets  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Your Voice, Your Vote.

Your Voice, Your Vote.

Wales became the first country in the world to legislate for the rights of citizens not-yet-born, when theTen years on, today's progress report finds "strong support" across the public sector.

Popular 2000s TV Show Bracing For Reboot

From Welsh government ministers down to those running schools and hospitals, they are now all meant to be evaluating the long-term impacts of their decisions and working collaboratively to tackle future threats such as climate change and growing health inequalities.But the report found many Public Service Boards - set up to bring different organisations together - were not working well, lacked resources and support.Leadership approaches across public sector organisations also needed to change in order to successfully implement the Act, it said.

Popular 2000s TV Show Bracing For Reboot

The report calls on the next government to launch a review of the Act, including "a public dialogue on the Wales we want for future generations".In a separate study, also published on Tuesday, the Wales Audit Office found the Act was "not driving the system-wide change that was intended".

Popular 2000s TV Show Bracing For Reboot

"We see good examples, but we also see instances where public bodies have given little or no explicit consideration to the Act," it said, singling out the health system in particular.

Derek Walker said Wales had "led the way for the past 10 years with our collective vision for a Cymru that's protecting future generations".Over the last week, as part of a series on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, we traced the path of migrants from Turkey to Bulgaria to the rest of Europe - the “biggest growth route” for those travelling into Europe, according to the University of Oxford’s Migration Observatory - in search of what it will really take to “smash the gangs”.

When we talk about smuggling gangs, we tend to focus on the end of the process, such as the UK's relations with France, and on the movement of people across the English Channel, but our route marks the start of the journey: it’s where migrants first enter Europe.Along the way, we spoke to migrants who shared their complicated reasons for putting their lives in the hands of people smugglers. What soon became clear was the sheer magnitude of the government’s task.

The crowded shopping bazaar in the Istanbul district of Esenyurt is popular with the thousands of Syrian refugees who live in the region. “You can see Syrian shops here,” Husam, a Syrian refugee, told us as he showed us around after Friday prayers. “Many were not here in 2015. You have falafel, shawarma - many shops for Syrian food. It was a comfortable, safe place for Syrians.” But now the mood is darkening.“In the past few years it’s not safe any more,” he explains. “There are groups of racist people who don’t like refugees. On public transportation you cannot speak comfortably in Arabic on your phone. People are attacked [for] speaking Arabic.”

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