View allAll Photos Tagged Principles
The first Global Forum on Youth Policies took place in Baku, Azerbaijan on 28-30 October 2014.
The final day started with the plenary session on guiding principles for global youth policy development. This session addressed principles that should guide &inform youth policy development, implementation and monitoring at local, national, regional and global levels.
Following the plenary session, regional sessions explored how the common denominators and guiding principles discussed throughout the Forum could be translated into regional contexts. Facilitated by the UN regional commissions, these sessions featured overviews of the regional status-quo in relation to youth policy & youth policy frameworks.
A special session was also held on mobilizing youth people in the response to Ebola. A session was about the efforts of young people in the fight against Ebola – with youth participants from the region.
To finalize the work and summarize the results of all discussions, a closing session on the issue of “Taking youth policies forward: the next 5 years” was held. The final session reviewed and took stock of the First Global Forum on Youth Policies. A summary by the reporting team and reflections by the General Rapporteur of the Forum was followed by statements of and discussions with the Forum’s main stakeholders, focusing on the way ahead and actions needed to be undertaken in the coming years to take youth policies forward. As a result of a closing session, Baku Commitments on Youth Policies was adopted. Find the Baku Commitments from here: www.youthpolicyforum.org/documents/commitment.pdf
The Farewell Reception was followed by the final dinner of the First Global Forum on Youth Policies.
These pieces are decorated with motifs and colours that pay homage to weaving, knitting, sewing, and quilting. This acknowledgment of women's work honours my mother, her mother, and all of my female ancestors, connecting me to their skilled hands and nurturing care.
"Things turn out the best for the people who make the best of the way things turn out." - > John Wooden < -
=======================================================
Henri Fayol's 14 Principles of Management Test
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
_____ Shows the ability to be self-motivated
_____ An important motivator primarily through salaries and wages
_____ This minimizes lost time and useless handling of materials
_____ Seeing that the goals of the organizations are always paramount
_____ This can bring about a sense of positive morale with employees.
_____ A combination of kindliness and fairness to all employees.
_____ Employees obeying good leadership
_____ This is a matter of degree in the making decisions
_____ This eliminates conflicting lines of authority
_____ Essential to ensure unity and coordination of a business
_____ Refers to the number of levels in the hierarchy of an organization
_____ An assurance of job security and career progress.
_____ The right to give orders and is balanced with responsibility
_____ Allows the individual to build up experience, improving their skills
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A Haiku Note:
========================
Fourteen Principles
Do the students remember
the order of them?
========================
Michael Parker, Global Industry Head of Shipping & Logistics, Citi and Chair of the Poseidon Principles drafting committee.
Credits: Marine Money and John Galayda.
REED, James Stalford. Principles of ceramics processing. Revisado e editado de: Introduction to the principles of ceramic processing. 1988. 2 ed. Nova York: John Wiley & Sons, c1995. 658 p. ISBN 047159721X.
Palavras-chave:
CERAMICA/Tecnologia; TRANSFORMACAO CERAMICA; CERAMICA/Produtos; CERAMICA/Matéria-prima.
4 Principles for Creating the Perfect Bedroom – Jessica Elizabeth
Create the perfect bedroom with these easy steps to follow
homedecorpins.ml/2019/03/09/4-principles-for-creating-the...
Part of our assignment was to roam the halls of ACAD and shoot stuff demonstrating some principles of composition. I wanted to show some repeating elements here, and also the use of lines to direct your attention. Unfortunately, the lines lead your eye right out of the frame and not to something of interest.
Use of asymmetrical balance. The balance is kept with both the cup and the feeling of empty space around it. Even empty space can be used to weight something down.
"Financial Madness in a Cheap Café." published in Gonzo.Harcourt Inc. 1998
Illustration by Ralph Steadman.
Gaby Brink presenting the Living Principles at Green is not the only Color: The Sustainable Design Rainbow
Prompt: Fresh Idea prompt, principles and elements of art, Exposure, highlights, Saturation, contrast. Editing
Why: This connects to the fresh idea prompt because this idea was not anyone else's idea I just thought it would've looked pretty. The principles of art came in because it used contrast and variety/unity. It had contrast in the photo mainly within the rings, the black and white rings contrast each other and the couple gold ones bring all of them together and allow them to be unified within the holder. this photo was also edited, it is a edited version of 4.3 and when I edited it I used exposure, highlights, saturation, and contrast. All of these edits made the rings and the holder that they are in pop out more with the wood and mirror background. The highlights emphasized the outside of the jewelry holder while the saturation and contrast made the rings pop more to the viewer.
What: My sisters pretty jewelry holder
this is the gestalt principal because the bike rack continues on through the whole picture = continuation
The Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) led a one day event on Rwanda’s Green Growth Principles and Strategies. The sessions introduced the joint work of the Government of Rwanda and the GGGI, and served as a platform for stakeholders to share knowledge on innovative work on green growth and a wide-ranging cross-cutting issues including sustainable urban planning, resource efficient green infrastructure, and competitive local economy.
The scale of the space ships versus the trees and the explorer create a vast difference which gives a large emphasis on the individual seeing these rockets. It lets the viewer notice that the small main focal point of the piece really is the small explorer.
Image by Bob Eggleton
www.munchkinpress.com/cpg149/albums/userpics/10028/Egglet...
Tawsif Khan
CommunityAction helps families stand on their feet by adopting the following principles: (a) a person in need best knows how he can fulfill his need; (b) people who have grown up poor don't know how to handle large sums of money even when they get it; (c) In this day and age, the proverb "Give a man a fish and he won't starve for a day. Teach a man how to fish and he won't starve for his entire life" is only true if we then sit with the man and counsel him on how to sell his fish! So financial counselling is an important aspect of our Action: Stand Up. The rickshaw puller was asked how he thought he could become self sufficient. He thought owning rickshaws he could rent out would be a good way. Actioneers then sat with him and thoroughly analysed his financial plan before buying him two rickshaws. The disabled rickshaw puller is now a happy rickshaw owner!