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Posts Tagged ‘resolution’

EUFOR has mandate for another year

The UN Security Council adopted on Wednesday a resolution that extends the mandate of the EU force (EUFOR) in Bosnia for another year. The resolution was adopted unanimously a day after one UN expert for human rights reported that political disputes still hinder the return of 117,000 people displaced during the war which was ended by the Treaty of Dayton in 1995, it was published at the website of the world organization.

Af nudged by US to resolve political cris The political crisis in Afghanistan that has been marred by possible rigging, come to a point of being pressured by the International community with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pushed for a word from the Afghan President Hamid Karzai on further situation on Tuesday. As a UN-backed panel threw out nearly a third of Hamid Karzai’s votes from the August Presidential polls, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the Afghan President will “set the stage” for resolving the political crisis by announcing his intentions on Tuesday. Clinton also hoped that the crisis in the war-torn country would be resolved soon. “He is going to announce his intentions. I am going to let him do that, but I am encouraged at the direction the situation is moving,” Clinton told reporters at the State Department after meeting with Iraqi President Nouri al-Maliki. She was responding to questions about the political crisis in Afghanistan in the wake of a UN-backed panel deciding to cut Karzai’s share of the vote to 48 per cent, below the threshold for an outright win. “I am very hopeful that we will see a resolution in line with the constitutional order in the next several days,” Clinton said. “But I don’t want to pre-empt in any way President Karzai’s statement, which will set the stage for how we go forward in the next stage of this,” she said, when asked whether Karzai has decided to accept the findings of a UN- backed fraud.is

The political crisis in Afghanistan that has been marred by possible rigging, come to a point of being pressured by the International community with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pushed for a word from the Afghan President Hamid Karzai on further situation on Tuesday.
As a UN-backed panel threw out nearly a third of [...]

Israel’s cabinet rejects UN war crimes report

Israel is brushing off last week’s resolution of the United Nations Human Rights Council. The resolution endorsed a report accusing the Jewish state of war crimes during the Gaza conflict.

India strongly reacts to UNSC resolution on NPT.

India has reacted sharply to the US backed United Nations security resolution on disarmament and non-proliferation, which was passed yesterday.
Addressing reporters on the sidelines of G20 at Pittsburgh summit, Prime Minister’s special envoy on Climate Change, Shyam Saran, who played an instrumental role in the finalization of the Indo US nuclear deal said: “We don”t [...]

Birthdays, Self-Reflection, and a Better Year Ahead

Birthdays, Self-Reflection, and a Better Year Ahead

I recently had a birthday. As I’ve gotten older, birthdays have become for me a time of intense self-reflection: where am I in my life, where do I want to be, what could I improve? They don;t depress me, like they do so many others, but they do make me think.

Birthdays are also natural times for me to make new resolutions. New Years Day has never felt like much more than an accident of the calendar, but birthdays – especially with mine falling right at the start of the academic calendar that has dominated most of my life, when I really am making a new start in much of my life with the dawn of a new academic school year – seem like a natural time to start making choices about the year ahead.

Now, I said “resolutions”, and we all know resolutions fail. My fellow Lifehack writers have written about the failure of resolutions over and over again, as for instance in Steve Errey’s post entitled pretty unambiguously New Years Resolutions Don’t Work – Here’s Why. But I think we need to reframe the idea of resolutions, to think about them not so much as goal-setting but as problem-solving.

When we think about resolutions, we tend to think of them as a matter of resolve, that is, of willpower. “I resolve to do x, y, and z.” Of course, if we had the willpower to work on our novel, pass on rich desserts, or be more outgoing at social events, we wouldn’t need to resolve those things in the first place. And so yes, they fail – and often leave us bitter and disappointed with ourselves.

But what if we thought about resolutions not so much as a matter of resolve but of solutions – that is, as a re-solution to life’s problems? My father, a great collector of quotes, likes to repeat Einstein’s dictum that “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results”; it seems to me that most of life’s problems remain with us because the solutions we’ve adopted don’t really solve them – and so we try the same solutions, over and over, harder and harder, thinking eventually those problems must give ground.

Consider, for example, this situation which many of us are or have been in:

  • Problem: Your aren’t advancing in your chosen career.
  • Resolution: Work harder, put in longer hours, apply for higher positions more often.
  • Re-solution: Are you still committed to this career? Maybe you don’t have the passion and drive you had when you entered it ten years ago. If money weren’t an issue, would you still want to do what you do? What would you do? Inventory your skillset and your passions today and start looking into changing careers.

Maybe that isn’t how you’d address the problem, but you get the idea: a real re-solution needs to address the problem not in terms of what you aren’t doing often or well enough but at the very core, questioning the assumptions that the problem itself is grounded in. If you’re stalled out in your career because you no longer have any passion for it and are just putting your time in to collect a check, then a career change may well be in order – and if so, then it no longer matters that you’re stalled in your current career.

Let’s try applying this to a personal matter:

  • Problem: You’ve been dating for months/years/decades and can’t seem to find someone with whom you’re interested in a relationship.
  • Resolution: Get out more. Join an online dating service. Visit a professional matchmaker.
  • Re-solution: What are you really looking for in a partner? Maybe you’re spending too much time and energy dating people because you should be interested in them, not because you are. Or Maybe you’re dating anyone who seems interested in you at all “just in case”. Take time to figure out the pattern in your past dating life and then act to consciously break that pattern.

Again, this may not be your re-solution, but the principle applies: whatever you’re doing isn’t working, so don’t do more of it, do something entirely different. And you can’t know what to do differently without really examining not just the behaviors that make up your current practices but the reasons you are behaving that way in the first place.

For the last few weeks, that’s exactly what I’ve been doing – re-thinking my goals, my choices, and my habits to see what simply isn’t helping to solve the things in my life that I’m not quite happy about. And, at the same time, the things I am – this  isn’t about self-flagellation, but about an honest inventory of strengths and shortcomings, so that the one can be applied to the other.

Two years ago, that process led me to embrace a fledgling second career as a writer; last year, it led me to seriously rethink my approach to relationships and what I wanted in a partner; this year, who knows? I think I have some answers I didn’t have a month ago – and I have another 12 months to figure out what to do with them.


Dustin M. Wax is a freelance writer and project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He is also the creator of The Writer’s Technology Companion, a site devoted to the tools of the writing trade. When he’s not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.

Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.


3D mapping tool Bhuvan launched by ISRO

New Delhi: ISRO has announced to launch its 3D mapping tool Bhuvan, that would give sharper pictures of any part of the world on personal computer using satellite images.

The new web-based tool allows users to have a closer look at any part of the subcontinent barring sensitive locations such as military and nuclear installations.
Minister of [...]

HP 2790m: 27inch LCD monitor by HP

A new monitor, the HP 2790m has been launched by HP. This is a huge 27-inch monitor with 1920 x 1080pixel resolution. It is also capable of doubling up as a television set.
This monitor is by far the largest LCD in the mainstream market of computers. It sports a dynamic contrast ratio of 30,000:1 and [...]

Wesley Epplin: Chicago Passes Nation’s First Green Food Resolution

Chicago beat out the likes of New York and San Francisco in officially resolving to help both the health of the planet and that of their citizens by encouraging more sustainable, healthier food options.

The Real News: The Honduran Battle for Washington

There is a showdown in Washington between high-powered lawyers, politicians and lobbyists on one side, and on the other some dedicated anti-coup activists and one Honduran delegation.

Resolution Honoring Michael Jackson Peeves Lawmakers

The Illinois House has put itself on record paying homage to the king of pop, but few lawmakers even realized they had feted the late Michael Jackson.

“Are you kidding me?” said Rep. Kevin Joyce, when told Friday of the House’s action, which …

UN sets new North Korea sanctions

North Korean missile launch - photo released April 2009

A United Nations committee has added a number of North Korean individuals and firms to a sanctions blacklist.

Five individuals, five firms and two weapons-related items are subject to the new sanctions regime.

A UN resolution in June toughened sanctions against North Korea after it conducted nuclear and missile tests.

The last time the UN imposed sanctions on Pyongyang, it responded by carrying out a nuclear test, says the BBC’s Laura Trevelyan in New York.

According to the UN Security Council sanctions committee, nations are now banned from doing business with five firms involved in North Korea’s nuclear programme, and five individuals are to have their financial assets frozen and face a travel ban.

They include:

  • three North Korean trading corporations – Namchongang, Korea Hykosin and Korea Tangun, as well as North Korea’s bureau of atomic energy
  • an Iranian-based company, Hong Kong Electronics, is also sanctioned, accused of moving millions of dollars used for North Korea’s nuclear programme
  • Yun Ho-jin, Ri Je-son, Hwang Sok-hwa, Ri Hong-sop and Han Yu-ro now face sanctions because of their involvement in the development of North Korea’s banned activities
  • countries cannot sell North Korea certain types of graphite or para-aramid fiber because they could be used to make parts for ballistic missiles

The UN resolution in June called for inspections of ships to or from North Korea believed to be carrying goods connected to weapons of mass destruction.

It also broadened the arms embargo and further cut the North’s access to the international financial system, but did not authorise the use of force.

Ties between North Korea and the outside world have grown extremely tense since it walked away from six-nation talks aimed at ending its nuclear programme.

It subsequently said it would "weaponise" its plutonium stocks and start enriching uranium, prompting fears that it is working to produce nuclear warheads small enough to put on missiles – though analysts say it could take a long time to do so.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.