Results 1–20 of 2000 for cover human intelligence

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Scottish Parliament: Addressing Child Poverty Through Parental Employment (14 Mar 2024)

Maggie Chapman: ...already working. As the Poverty Alliance has pointed out, more than two thirds of children in poverty live in a household where at least one adult is in paid work, but that work pays too little or covers too few hours to meet a family’s basic needs. That is shocking. Whether we are talking about deliberately exploitative employers, small enterprises that are, themselves, squeezed by...

Income Tax (Charge) (12 Mar 2024)

Dean Russell: ...the surgery. I had the opportunity to use one of the machines a while ago, and its level of accuracy was absolutely incredible. However, the area on which I wish to focus is the role of artificial intelligence. I have a few asks of the Minister, but I am aware that he may not be able to respond to them, because I appreciate that they fall more within the remit of the Department of Health...

Public Bill Committee: Investigatory Powers (Amendment) Bill [Lords]: Clause 2 - Low or no reasonable expectation of privacy ( 7 Mar 2024)

Stuart McDonald: ...to give examples of personal datasets that would be considered to have a low or no reasonable expectation of privacy. I refer hon. Members to a letter from the Chair of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Edinburgh South West (Joanna Cherry), which has been shared with us all: “There is perhaps some ambiguity or confusion as to what data is...

Northern Ireland Assembly: Private Members' Business: Apprenticeships ( 5 Mar 2024)

Mike Nesbitt: ...'Democracy at Work: Social Dialogue and the Tripartite Model'. Our view of the role of further education is, I think, a fundamental of how we view our society, what we think of education and which intelligences we cherish. We all know that there are different forms of intelligence, and it seems to me that our formal education system values the academic over everything else. If we want to...

Schools (Mental Health Professionals) Bill [HL] - Second Reading ( 1 Mar 2024)

Baroness Barran: ...updated framework, published in the past few weeks, has a much greater integration of special educational needs and disabilities, including mental health within that. We expect these teams to cover at least 50% of pupils by April 2025. We come to the issue of funding, which a number of noble Lords, including the noble Lord, Lord Hunt of Kings Heath, mentioned. He will understand very well...

Public Bill Committee: Trade (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership) Bill [Lords]: Clause 2 - Treatment of conformity assessment bodies etc (20 Feb 2024)

Gareth Thomas: ..., but want to operate within our markets. There is also a need for a stronger role for Parliament in general, specifically around conformity assessment of new technologies such as artificial intelligence. Amendment 1 would make the negative procedure a positive one, to make a debate more likely. Amendment 2 would require more consultation with Scottish and Welsh Ministers, with Northern...

Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill - Second Reading: Amendment to the Motion (29 Jan 2024)

Lord Baker of Dorking: ..., and many were allowed in. However, in 1990, the number surged to 45,000 in Britain and 90,000 in Germany. We soon moved on to 70,000 and then 90,000. What had happened was that the world’s human traffickers had realised that there was a wonderful loophole in the convention: it gave every citizen in any country of the world the right to go to another country if they were facing...

Religious Persecution and the World Watch List — [Valerie Vaz in the Chair] (25 Jan 2024)

Fiona Bruce: ...365 million Christians around the world faced high levels of persecution or discrimination for their faith in Jesus Christ. That is one in every seven Christians worldwide. In the top 50 countries covered by the report, 317 million Christians face high, very high or extreme levels of persecution. Why should that be in the 21st century? As I say, this is happening not only to Christians but...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 73 - Ethical policing (including duty of candour) (25 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: ...on that force. Furthermore, subsection 2A(a) in amendment 135 refers to, “sexual relationships with members of the public whilst acting in their capacity as a police officer”. Section 1 of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Act 2021—some of us were on that Bill Committee as well—amended part II of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 so as to enable...

Post Office (Horizon System) Compensation Bill - Second Reading (and remaining stages) (16 Jan 2024)

Baroness Chakrabarti: ...that is from his Commentaries on the Laws of England. In those commentaries, he also said that criminal law should always be “conformable to the dictates of truth and justice, the feelings of humanity, and the indelible rights of mankind”. For anyone who believes that human rights were some confection from 1945, or even later in the 1960s, I remind them that William Blackstone said...

Trade (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership) Bill [HL] - Report: Amendment 6 (16 Jan 2024)

Lord Johnson of Lainston: ...turnaround times for customs, that that does not apply where there is a specific risk associated with certain types of imports—they can be suspended. At the same time there is a great degree of intelligence used to ensure, particularly with commodities, that there are risk-based approaches which allow us to assess whether there are specific areas of concern. There are lists drawn up to...

Data Protection and Digital Information Bill - Second Reading (19 Dec 2023)

Viscount Camrose: ...the UK GDPR and DPA 2018 to ease compliance burdens on businesses and introduce safeguards from new technologies. It also updates the similar regimes that apply to law enforcement agencies and intelligence services. Part 2 enables DSIT’s digital verification services policy, giving people secure options to prove their identity digitally across different sectors of the economy if they...

Backbench Business: Persecution of Buddhists: Tibet — [Valerie Vaz in the Chair] (14 Dec 2023)

Fiona Bruce: ...to her remarks. It is a privilege on occasion to have a little more time than one normally has to speak about an issue. If I may, I will first go back to a report produced by the Conservative Party Human Rights Commission when I was the chair in 2016, titled “The Darkest Hour”. It was about the crackdown on human rights in China from 2013-16. There is a chapter on Tibet that quotes...

Investigatory Powers (Amendment) Bill [HL] - Committee (1st Day): Amendment 1 (11 Dec 2023)

Lord Fox: ...data, incurring extra protections when it comes to retention and processing, regardless of whether the information can be considered to have been made public. The DPA would still apply to the intelligence agencies in processing—at least, that is our view, and we would like to like the Minister to comment on that—but under the Bill as drafted the contradictory standards would also...

Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Bill - Second Reading ( 5 Dec 2023)

Viscount Camrose: .... Firms would already have been able to challenge decisions to impose interventions on the basis that there were disproportionate interferences with their rights under the European Convention on Human Rights. This amendment allows that challenge to happen under usual JR principles. Moving appeals on penalties to full merits brings the regime into line with the Enterprise Act 2002. It will...

Trade (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership) Bill [HL] - Second Reading (21 Nov 2023)

Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton: ...pandemics. It has never been clearer that our domestic security depends upon global security. We must approach these challenges from a position of strength. Our Foreign Office, Diplomatic Service, intelligence services, and aid and development capabilities are some of the finest assets of their kind anywhere in the world, and I have seen at first hand the professionalism, passion and...

Scottish Parliament: Situation in the Middle East (21 Nov 2023)

Ivan McKee: ...that Palestinian lives somehow do not matter. Let us be clear on the legal position. The commission by one party to a conflict, including an armed group, of serious violations of international humanitarian law does not justify their commission by another party. We also condemn what has been happening on the west bank, where settler violence continues. More than 300 Palestinians have been...

King’s Speech - Debate (6th Day) (15 Nov 2023)

Lord Collins of Highbury: ...have reportedly been killed, and every one of those lives mattered. Two-thirds of the dead are women and children. As the noble Lord, Lord Purvis, said, neither should we forget the UN workers and humanitarian workers who have suffered the same fate. These deaths are shocking and cannot be ignored. The desperate reports from hospitals in northern Gaza, short of fuel and filled with...

Procurement Bill [HL] - Commons Reason: Motion A (25 Oct 2023)

Baroness Neville-Rolfe: ...supplier or one of its connected persons fails to comply with the established ethical or professional standards within its respective industry, including relating to the removal, storage and use of human tissue, the supplier could face exclusion on the grounds of professional misconduct. However, as far as I am aware, no supplier to the UK public sector has been involved in forced organ...

Ukraine - Motion to Take Note (21 Sep 2023)

Baroness Goldie: ...tanks, which first entered service in 1961. There is no doubt that defeats and military setbacks have taken a huge toll on the Russian war machine. As I said in my opening speech, we know that from intelligence and circulating domestic Russian media sources. The lack of armoured vehicles at the 9 May Victory Day parade supports reports suggesting that nearly half of Russia’s tanks have...


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