Auteur Sujet: pbpi EU agrees radical reforms on migration and asylum laws  (Lu 2 fois)

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pbpi EU agrees radical reforms on migration and asylum laws
« le: Janvier 08, 2025, 08:20:59 am »
Asuo Dozens respond to police appeal in Durham child sex abuse case
 His boots deep in winter mud, Greenwich Park community archaeologist Andrew Mayfield runs through the finds from the latest of the parks volunteer digs.  Weve found a swallow brooch, loads of clay pipes and coins, the lens of a sextant and, strangely, a Sony mobile that was buried pretty deep,  he says.Mayfield gestures at the volunteers, who range in age from 20s to 70-something, up to their waists in earthen trenches and armed with trowels and brushes. Were having a final push to un stanley flask cover Charles IIs steps today,  Mayfield continues.  Steve and Karen over there are brushing up a good-looking vertical [step] for the photos. The dig is part of a boom in community archaeology that is seeing everyone from children to retirees joining groups up and down the country excavating Britains history.Hundreds of volunteers, including primary school children, last month unearthed a 1,400-year-old  possible temple  near Sutton Hoo in Suffolk as part of an project which began three years ago.In Cardiff, schoolchildren were also involved in the excavation of bronze age Caerau hillfort in 2022, wh stanley becher ile further north, Newcastle Universitys citizen science project, WallCap, is excavating and preserving Hadrians  stanley mugs Wall with the help of locals.The Operation Nightingale scheme, in association with Wessex Archaeology, offers ex-servicemen injured in conflict the chance to take part in excavations on Salisbury Plain, while recent years have seen the emergence of have-a-go archaeologists digging up their Gwwo Lloyds Banking Group s bosses were  reckless , say lawyers for US investors
 Recommendations to tackle harassment and discrimination at the criminal bar, including mandatory training for judges and barristers and improved flexible working policies at chambers, have been outlined in a report.The proposals published on Thursday from the Association of Women Barristers  AWB  follow a roundtable event to discuss the problem of retaining women and othe stanley cup r underrepresented groups at senior level at the bar.They include long-term support for victims of harassment and the recruitment of male  champions  to help counter a  gentlemanly  culture where it is considered inappropriate or bad form to call out unacce gourde stanley ptable behaviour by a fellow barrister.At the roundtable meeting, where female barristers at all levels shared their experiences, participants described working at the bar as a  dog eat dog world  in which those who are white, middle-class and male are most likely to flo stanley polska urish.The legal profession is rife with prejudice 鈥?Ive seen it first-hand | Charlotte ProudmanRead moreThey raised concerns ranging from being overlooked for work after taking time off for childcare, to discrimination and intimidation. Others cited a lack of facilities in court centres for underrepresented groups 鈥?for example a room where breastfeeding mothers could express milk or toilets for those who identify as non-binary.The report found inappropriate behaviour in robing rooms  still abounds , with female barristers finding themselves excluded from conversations about cases and male b