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On May 3, 2011, under authority of Clean Air Act (CAA) sections 111 and 112, the EPA proposed both national emission standards for hazardous air pollutants (NESHAP) from coal- and oil-fired electric utility steam generating units (EGUs) and standards of performance for fossil-fuel-fired electric utility, industrial-commercial- institutional, and small industrial-commercial-institutional steam generating units (76 FR 24976). After consideration of public comments, the EPA is finalizing these rules in this action. Pursuant to CAA section 111, the EPA is revising standards of performance in response to a voluntary remand of a final rule. Specifically, we are amending new source performance standards (NSPS) after analysis of the public comments we received. We are also finalizing several mi...
... on this country's electricity supply and economy. Many comments provided additional information and... larger but not the largest fish for subsistence consumption) as the basis for estimating risk at e...'' of the MACT rule would be that the ``market for electricity in the U.S. will be more level'' a...
... of today's proposed rule on jobs and the economy, EPA finds that more jobs will be created in the a... adopted as a final rule, will be that the market for electricity in the U.S. will be more level and... was determined to be consumption by subsistence fish-eating populations and women of childbearing ...
..."changes in the organization of the global economy have greatly increased the role of business in gen... access to water is a public good and not a market commodity. All individuals should have access to w... obligations in his book Basic Rights--Subsistence, Affluence and U.S. Foreign Policy, where he disti...
... along the road to women's growing labor market incorporation, as the feminization-of-labor narrat... often inadequate to ensure household subsistence in Mexico's current economy. Women can, of course,...
As the story goes, company agents encountered a band of S'Klallam Indians (sometimes called Clallam or Klallam) at the mill site and eventually persuaded them to move 1,900 feet directly across the water, to a spot named Point Julia. The company promised that, in exchange, "We will build you homes from this mill and you will have jobs. (The S'Klallam) were camped on shore; there were no structures there that we can tell," says [Jon Rose], during a one-on-one interview. "It was not, 'We're sending you out at knifepoint or gunpoint.' Port Gamble S'Klallam leaders remember things differently, arguing that the site was an ancestral village used for centuries. Both the mill and company town were originally called "Teekalet," a S'Klallam name meaning "brightness of the noonday sun," a refer...
... had elevated Indian fishing from subsistence living to civil rights action. The scuffle landed ... forestlands for development and the timber market has eroded. In 2007, Pope announced it would sell ... leaders discussed a burgeoning recreation economy, attracting weekend cyclists, hikers, runners, act...
... which constitute the global political economy. As such, orthodox accounts of 'civil war' are pre... local needs and towards the international market. In creating a dependent "class of local resource-..., reducing the land available to subsistence farmers and pastoralists whilst devaluing their mo...
Introduction - II. The economic covenant and economic, social, and cultural rights in the united states - A. Origins - B. The State’s Obligations - 1. Self-Determination (Article 1) - 2. General Provisions (Articles 2-5) - 3. Substantive Obligations (Articles 6-15) - 4. Monitoring (Articles 16-25) - 5. Ratification - C. Why the United States Should Ratify the Economic Covenant - 1. Ratification Is Practical - 2. Ratification Is the Right Thing to Do - D. Obstacles to Ratification - III. The economic covenant should be ratified as a congressional-executive agreement - A. The United States’ History Regarding Human Rights - B. Why a Congressional-Executive Agreement? - C. A National Floor for Economic Rights - D. Economic Rights Are Justiciable - IV. Conclusion
..., which will vary according to local-labor-market and client-group characteristics. These benchmarks...In an economy with no unemployment benefits and low taxes, this ... absence of unemployment benefits and subsistence allowances, some clients may prefer training relat...
The literature on constitutional design suggests that desirable social and political outcomes may be accomplished through optimal institutional planning and implementation. In this article, the author engages in a brief thought experiment concerning two important yet not often addressed aspects of constitutional-design theory. First, he places constitutional design in the broader context of what he calls the "design sciences" -- the many disciplines, domains, and activities from urban planning to space exploration -- that rely on design to accomplish big, noble goals. Second, he addresses the question of "success" in constitutional design, namely how to define and assess the actual impact of constitutional structures in accomplishing desirable objectives. Constitutional design is a mode...
... and balances, individual freedoms, and market economy is said to yield long-term political stabi... (e.g., Brazil) have unqualified subsistence-rights provisions in their constitutions,109 where...
... proselytism has been the failure of the economy in Latin America to empower most of its population... for individual's occupation, taking subsistence peasants as the baseline for comparison. These dum...1996. Silent revolution: The rise of market economics in Latin America. London: Cassell. -----...
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