revendications du mouvement – English Translation – Keybot Dictionary

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  2 Hits www.hernandezdelagarza.com  
Toujours selon des Tweets de l’opposition saoudienne, les  plus importantes revendications du mouvement sont :
Still, according to the Saudi opposition’s Tweets, the most important demands of the movement are:
  pages.ei-ie.org  
Cette déclaration politique est fondée sur des concepts essentiels de la philosophie de l'IE, qui représentent les valeurs fondamentales et les revendications du mouvement syndical de l'éducation. Ceux-ci comprennent une éducation de qualité, en tant que droit humain, dispensée par les autorités publiques3 et disponible gratuitement pour toutes et tous, l'éducation inclusive et l'égalité au sein de l'éducation et de la société, et un statut professionnel élevé pour les enseignant(e)s.
10. The importance of quality teaching for quality education cannot be underestimated. To this end, teachers at all levels of education must be appropriately trained and qualified. Teachers should continue their professional development upon recruitment through a period of induction into the profession with the support by a mentor and should have access throughout their careers to high quality continuous professional development and learning. These opportunities should be provided by the public authorities or other employers at no cost to individual teachers.
  scan.madedifferent.be  
À Davos, Steve Cotton rencontre des représentants de l’OCDE (Organisation de coopération et de développement économiques), de l’OIT (Organisation internationale du travail), des Nations Unies, du FMI (Fonds monétaire international) et du PNUD (Programme des Nations Unies pour le développement) pour faire entendre les revendications du mouvement syndical.
While there, he is meeting leaders of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), ILO (international Labour Organization), United Nations, IMF (International Monetary Fund) and UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) to help drive home the labour movement’s demands.
  manitobia.ca  
Francis Beynon et Lillian Thomas, deux des meneuses de la lutte pour le suffrage au Manitoba, ont rompu avec McClung et se sont opposées à la loi sur les élections en temps de guerre, déclarant que tous les citoyens canadiens devraient avoir le droit de vote. Beynon en a conclu que les revendications du mouvement réformiste étaient trop modestes.
Other reformers took a very different approach. Fred Dixon, a labour member of the Manitoba Legislature, opposed the war and organized an Anti-Conscription League. Returned soldiers broke up the meetings and assaulted Dixon. When Free Press reporter Vernon Thomas congratulated Dixon on his courage in opposing the war, he lost his job with the newspaper. Francis Beynon and Lillian Thomas, two of the leader figures in the battle for suffrage in Manitoba, broke with McClung and opposed the wartime election laws, saying that all Canadian citizens should have the vote. Beynon concluded that the reform movement’s demands were too modest. Wars, she felt, arose from the underlying social and political pressures of a capitalist economy. As her views became more radical she found that she no longer could continue writing for the Grain Growers’ Guide. Finally, one of the leading figures of the social gospel in Manitoba, J.S. Woodworth, saw his job as the director of the Bureau of Social Welfare disappear when he opposed conscription. Like Beynon, Woodsworth concluded that the prevention of war would require radical changes in the way societies were ordered. This conclusion led him to resign from the ministry and eventually enter politics. Richard Rigg, a leading figure in the Winnipeg labour movement and a member of the provincial legislature was another strong opponent of conscription. Like others in the labour movement, he pointed out that workers were being asked to sacrifice their lives in the war, while wealthy Canadians were actually able to make a profit on the war by purchasing government bonds. However, anti-war labour leaders were not able to rally workers to support them in their opposition to war.