The Rigour and Responsiveness in Skills strategy sets out plans for a more rapid intervention.
Mr Bordwell's book is saved from fulsomeness by the rigour of his academic research.
Like it or not, that means sticking to the same policies of economic rigour.
His rigour and enthusiasm ensured his daughter's love of books was no parlour game.
It lacks academic and technical rigour, as well as clear links to the realities of the workplace.
In countries where national authorities enjoy little trust, Europe has the appeal of rules, modernity and rigour.
"I'll speak to you in the subversive language of truth, " he said, "fiscal rigour alone will kill us".
The emphasis in Wales will be on skills and the needs of employers as much as academic rigour.
But if amendments there must be, he is likely to try to balance Teutonic rigour with Latin solidarity.
Partly, the accusation was that they secretly envied a numerical rigour to which they could not possibly aspire.
Little wonder that Italy's recent conversion to rigour in its public-sector accounts has been greeted with leery scepticism.
Early on, Mrs Guigou sought to distract attention from her looks with seriousness, rigour and toward importunate men icy disdain.
One important trick that any popular historian must master is that of achieving a balance between rigour and readability.
Speaking to The Sunday Telegraph, Mr Price urged the food industry to apply "renewed rigour" to their testing regimes.
And for countries with an acute history of inflation, the rigour of a currency board may be the best medicine.
Earlier this month, Labour's Shadow Schools Minister Kevin Brennan pledged that Labour would not support a "policy that undermines both rigour and equity".
National Numeracy says Michael Gove's plans to make pupils learn times tables, long division and fractions earlier imposes a "superficial rigour".
And, despite a reputation for inflexibility born of a puritanical moral rigour, he has already proved quite adept at political manoeuvring.
Liberal Democrat MP Simon Hughes warned of reports of "variable levels of rigour deployed by different companies with responsibility across our airports".
To central bankers, he advocates more rigour in evaluating the impact of their decisions through greater use of economic models and forecasting.
The full rigour of externally-marked exams would be reserved for the advanced level - which would become the dominant, end-of-school academic qualification.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Northern Ireland | Exam reform may not affect NI
Her election platform promised transparency and rigour, but gave few details of her views (she barely campaigned, and faced no serious challenger).
If Mr Cardoso fails to make Brazil's new-found fiscal rigour stick, and world markets remain turbulent, then he should really start worrying.
The eurozone countries bring their deficits under control and embrace budgetary rigour.
But he said it was "important to retain rigour within the system".
Since the end of the cold war, with its unifying rigour, California's Republicans have fought with each other as much as with Democrats.
But he believes it will demand rigour in formulating and expressing the Church's point of view, for example in the House of Lords.
But because of the way they've come about, what you don't tend to get from traditional measures is neatness, order or scientific rigour.
Mr Monti, a former economics professor, was chosen to impose financial rigour on the economy, after Mr Berlusconi quit the prime minister's job.
The party, which has headed a minority government since 1994, has spent three years preaching a new gospel of fiscal rigour and low inflation.
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