A list of puns related to "House Of Commons Library"
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cdp-2020-0138/
It's very well written report discuss 6 men's rights issues: health, suicide, education, homelessness, domestic abuse and shared parenting.
The International Menβs Day debates started in 2015 by conservative MP and the feminist MP reponded by saying we will have a debate on "men's rights issues when we will have 50% female in the parliment" ! he openly challenge feminists myths like the falsehood that women are treated harshly by the justice syetem. (watch this video)
Just one MP started an annual debate imagine if in every parliment we have just 5 MP that advocate for men's rights ?!
This year the debate is sponsored jointly by Philip Davies MP and Ben Bradley MP. he tweeted" I'll open the #InternationalMensDay debate this afternoon to talk about mental health, about the nature of public discourse - #MalePrivilege, #ToxicMasculinity - that damages our young men, and to celebrate the importance of male #RoleModels; particularly dads! "
The House of Commons LibraryΒ is a research and information service based in the UK Parliament.Β They have put together several Covid-19 resources you might find interesting:
FindΒ moreΒ analysis on the Libraryβs Covid-19 resource page.
The House of Commons Library and Parliamentary Office for Science and Technology (POST) have published materials which might be useful during this period:
There are quick-read articles and longer briefings on employment, welfare and benefits, housing, education, travel, vaccines and more.
This page will be regularly updated but as this is a fast-moving issue, each piece should be read as accurate at the time of publication.
--
About: The House of Commons Library is a research and information service based in the UK Parliament. They publish politically impartial and rigorously fact-checked research to help MPs and their staff scrutinise legislation, develop policy, and support constituents. More info: About the House of Commons Library.
POST produces impartial, non-partisan, and peer-reviewed briefings, designed to make scientific research accessible to the UK Parliament.Β They cover the areas of biology and health, energy and environment, physical sciences and computing, and social sciences. More info: About POST.
I have several modules/libraries that either I or my co-workers wrote, and these modules/libraries get used in lots of projects. Right now, these are not stored in any central place, and are just copied from one project to another and modified as needed. They are, in there originally written states, general enough to be useful in lots of projects and easily integrated with one another. The problem is, if we want to change something about how a particular modules works in several projects, we have to go make those changes several times.
What are common practices for properly maintaining and storing libraries that get used a lot? Create a version control repository that houses them and import into other projects when necessary? I can see that working with git
but maybe not svn
as easily (but I am much more familiar with git
).
I suppose the main issue I would like to solve is that I am tired of copying common code from one project to another.
I've tagged this as "Engineering" because it seems this question applies to how to go about solving a problem in an engineering workflow/team.
Thanks!
I'll take the pills and cover myself with a blanket...
The House of Commons Library and Parliamentary Office for Science and Technology (POST) have published materials which you might find useful during this period:
There are quick-read articles and longer briefings on employment, welfare and benefits, housing, education, travel, vaccines and more
This page will be regularly updated but as this is a fast-moving issue, each piece should be read as accurate at the time of publication.
--
About: The House of Commons Library is a research and information service based in the UK Parliament. They publish politically impartial and rigorously fact-checked research to help MPs and their staff scrutinise legislation, develop policy, and support constituents. More info: About the House of Commons Library.
POST produces impartial, non-partisan, and peer-reviewed briefings, designed to make scientific research accessible to the UK Parliament.Β They cover the areas of biology and health, energy and environment, physical sciences and computing, and social sciences. More info: About POST.
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