Fnaq EU leaders meet ErdoДџan to resolve fight over refugees Ex-NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg will be Norways finance ministerOslo government reshuffles key roles after coalition collapse.Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInFree article usually reserved for subscribersJens Stoltenberg will replace the outgoing finance minister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum, from the Center Party. | Omar Havana/Getty ImagesFebruary 4, 202511:35 am CETBy Ke [url=https://www.stanley1913.com.es]vaso stanley[/url] trin JochecovГЎFormer NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg will make a surprise return to Norways government.He will become finance minister as part of a Cabinet reshuffle after the government collapsed last week. I am deeply honoured to have been a [url=https://www.stanleycup.com.se]stanley sverige[/url] sked to help my country at this critical stage. Having carefully considered the current challenges we face, I have decided to accept Prime Minister StГёres request to serve as his minister of finance, Stoltenberg said in a press release Tuesday morning.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Euroskeptic Center Party quit the two-party coalition last week, leaving Prime Minister Jonas Gahr StГёres center-left Labor Party to govern on its own.Stoltenberg will replace the outgoing finance minister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum, from the Center Party.The Labour party s Tore Onshuus Sandvik was appointed as defense minister, replacing BjГёrn Arild Gram, the Norweg [url=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de]stanley cup[/url] ian government alsoВ announced.В Before becoming NATO chief, Stoltenberg served twice as Norways prime minister, 2000-2001 and 2005-2013. He also held the finance minister position in the 1990s Mkjb The Week Ahead Women and a more level playing fieldHow can innovative jobs in global future-oriented sectors and greater social cohesion be achieved through increasingly stereotyped work, with only 32% of managers being women who earn 15% less than men Increase in women at work ;, 23 February-1 March 2006 .Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInMarch 8, 20065:00 pm CETAccording to Eurostat, in 2002 women in the EU25 represented 34% of graduates in science, computing and engineering, and 28% of all researchers.But assuming [url=https://www.cup-stanley.com.de]stanley thermobecher[/url] they choos [url=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk]stanley flask[/url] e to stay in Europe, as mothers, an absence from their sector of three years or even less renders them practically unemployable.They are left with a miserable and expensive dilemma when, as recently reported in the UK Sunday Times, the world-renowned parenting guru ; Steve Biddulph warns that placing under-three-year-olds in nurseries risks damaging their development.AdvertisementAdvertisementChildbearing as [url=https://www.cups-stanley.co.uk]stanley thermos[/url] ide, even a seemingly level playing field may not be so. Women managers surveyed by the UK Ashridge Management Centre named stereotypes and assumptions about what they would and would not do as the most important factor in career advancement. In contrast men cited the lack of a sponsor or mentor. While assumptions are so diverse and one set is dominant in its current strength of representation, change is extremely challenging. Despite management rhetoric about an effort to comply with in