Anticipation. The Director-General may permit employees to anticipate their next sick leave entitlement. The value of anticipated sick leave will be deducted from the employee’s final pay should the employee resign before the next entitlement falls due.
Anticipation. An employee, who has more than 20 years continuous service, will be entitled to anticipate retiring leave to allow reduced days or hours or for a block of leave. MPI will work proactively with employees to develop a suitable flexible working arrangement or similar. An employee who anticipates blocks of retiring leave rather than reduced days or hours may do so provided they return to work at MPI for at least 6 months following the block of leave.
Anticipation. An employee may be permitted to anticipate up to half the annual leave entitlement due, subject to refund on resignation if the next entitlement has not been earned. An employee in their first year of service may be granted anticipated annual leave proportionate to their length of service. An employee with over 20 years’ continuous service may anticipate one year's annual leave entitlement, subject to refund on resignation if the next entitlement has not been earned.
Anticipation. Anticipated, assigned or encumbered or ------------ subject to any creditor's claim or subject to execution, attachment or similar legal process, or
Anticipation. Anticipated events are described in [5] as a technique to couple events introduced during refinement with their variant and decouple them from variables. The approach solves the technical problem of finding a good ordering for a chain of refinements by relaxing the constraints on that order thus increasing the number of good orderings. Anticipated events can be used to avoid using lexicographic variants altogether, (m ›→ n) < (mj ›→ nj) ⇔ m < mj ∨ (m = mj ∧ n < nj) . Say, m is the variant of a machine M and n the variant of some refinement N of M . For an anticipated event f of M we would show that it does not increase m, that is, m < mj. Ultimately, event f has to be refined by a convergent event f in machine N , say. In machine N we have to show that f decreases the variant n, that is, n < nj. Following this technique we implicitly construct a lexicographic variant (m n), similar to the one shown above. Anticipated events have turned out to be a very useful concept for modelling beyond the original purpose. Below are three examples of their practical use.
Anticipation. This order is subject to anticipation for prepayment at 18% per annum. Discount and anticipation shall be computed from the date of receipt of goods. Where delivery is required to be made to a consolidator, the date of receipt of goods shall be deemed to be the date three days after the goods destined for our distribution center are actually placed in custody of the consolidator.
Anticipation. Each of the Parties expressly waives its right to invoke the provisions of article 1195 of the French Civil Code and the unforeseeable circumstances provided for therein, and consequently undertakes to assume its obligations even if the contractual balance is upset by circumstances that were unforeseeable when the Agreement was concluded, even if their performance proves excessively onerous, and to bear all the economic and financial consequences thereof.
Anticipation. The Director-General may permit observers to anticipate their next sick leave entitlement. The necessary adjustments will be made to the final pay should an observer resign before the next entitlement falls due.
Anticipation. Palestinian girls in Hebron wait for Theatre Day Productions’ performance of The Glass Café. Through Sweden’s University College of Film, Radio, Television and Theatre, Xxxx supports training and further education for theatre workers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Production support has also been given to drama groups that perform for child- ren and adolescents at schools, youth centres and refugee centres.
Anticipation. An alternative argument would hold that as soon as citizens catch wind of an agreement – particularly when they hold unfavorable views of the IMF – they will protest to try to prevent a deal. This could certainly be the case, particularly when a state has received multiple packages from the IMF. In this case, the citizens would have to not only be aware that a deal was being struck, but also that the deal was worth protesting against. Thus I expect that the month leading up to the implementation of an agreement will have increased protest frequency. This may be due to reasons posited above: a general backlash against globalization, adjustment by international institutions, (i.e. cuts or changes to spending), or the feeling that the state’s government is about to become beholden to international creditors. It is beyond the scope of this paper to understand the specific underlying reasons for protests or repression; I leave this to future work. My goal is simply to establish the degree to which these deals spark protest and repression and to examine the timing of these events. However, it is clear that such protest does occur (and is occurring currently). One example from ACLED (the Armed Conflict and Location Event Dataset, a source discussed below) highlights such an instance of protest in Pakistan: “Awami Action Committee (AAC), National Trade Union Federation (NTUF), lawyers, students, and political party activists organized a rally to protest against IMF loans, contract labor system, and privatization on Aug 11 (2018) in a march that began at the Arts Council of Pakistan and ended [sic] at the Press Club in Karachi.” It seems reasonable to think that similar events could have occurred many times in the timeframe that I focus on in this study, particularly when taking into account the many agreements and loans that have been implemented and widely publicized. The protesters in this quote are rallying against making a deal with the IMF, rather than protesting an ongoing loan package. From the literature and the nature of the loan negotiation and approval process, it is unclear which window of time would be best to examine. That is, how long before a deal is implemented do citizens hear about the deal, and when do they decide to protest? I use one month in the hypotheses below as an appropriate window, though I am ambivalent about this timeframe. To look at this issue from the lens of the state, it seems reasonable to assume that repres- sion may follow ...