However, a certain bias in Western psychiatry exists against somatization as an inferior way of dealing with emotions and intrapsychic conflicts. |
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In wintering birds, conflicts over food are often resolved by threat displays. |
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The king of beasts may soon be dethroned, as conflicts between African lions and humans contribute to the big cats' population decline. |
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Then, through explaining and defending their views to their group, those conflicts can be reconciled. |
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Time has to be spent by managers coping with and reconciling the conflicts as best they can. |
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And we certainly cannot reconcile the conflicts about affirmative action preferences without answering these questions. |
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There will always be confusions and conflicts introduced not only by commercialism but also by mass communication and the electronic media. |
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It's an organization that rose from the ashes of World War II, a forum for solving conflicts and other global problems. |
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These include theater missile defense systems to protect troops and bases in relatively small regions of conflicts. |
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Zatoichi's a reformed yakuza forever finding himself dragged into conflicts between the corrupt ruling classes and their exploited peasantry. |
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Political unification without social reintegration is likely to cause severe conflicts. |
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We must always remember all who took part in all conflicts past and present. |
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One anachronism is the inclusion of twin diesel engines, for manoeuvring in harbours and avoiding conflicts in busy shipping lanes. |
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There certainly have been conflicts and rivalries in the group, but basically we are an amazingly harmonious bunch. |
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The resignations and ongoing conflicts with the Board of Governors were renewing the demands for the establishment of a student government. |
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National policy could give a more balanced steer to the conflicts of social justice and affordable housing against landscape and amenity. |
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Who will follow their conscience when it conflicts with the demands of an amoral authority? |
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Nearby is a vast Roman amphitheatre for gladiatorial conflicts, mock sea-battles, and the killing of wild animals captured in nearby Africa. |
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These structural applications recognize when dimensions are adjusted and point out dimensional conflicts as changes are made. |
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And its recent past is not fraught with the kind of conflicts that scriptwriters drool over. |
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It was an ode to peace in English requesting Lord Krishna to come down to earth and resolve the conflicts of the world. |
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The novel focuses on the conflicts between atheism and theism, Leninism and Marxism. |
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It also settles for the peaceful resolution of conflicts anywhere in the world. |
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For most perpetual conflicts in marriages, what matters is not conflict resolution, but the attitudes that surround discussion of the conflict. |
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Harry's personal conflicts become the central focus, and the emotional resonance is sufficient to power the film. |
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Ordinarily of course, self-directed aggression conflicts with the life instinct, especially it's self-preservative component, the animus. |
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These anointers have a poor record of backing candidates who know right from wrong and avoid ethical conflicts. |
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Furthermore, legitimate children often had the advantage of another parent to balance out any conflicts with their mothers. |
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There were territorial conflicts, wars, civil disputes, arguments and resentment. |
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Those who call for an end to impunity view crimes committed in wars or civil conflicts in the same way as crimes committed by common criminals. |
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These treaties apply when the armed forces of sovereign nations engage in armed hostilities, and some sub-rules apply during civil conflicts. |
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These events and conflicts linked anti-racism to democratic political development more strongly than ever before. |
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And as political questions move down the agenda, so cultural and purely sectarian conflicts have risen to the fore. |
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The increasingly opaque Williams, dragged into the church's interminable conflicts, needs a right-hand man to keep an eye on the bigger picture. |
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For others there may be even greater challenges when deep inner emotional and spiritual conflicts emerge. |
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The flyover projects are stuck with no sign of a resolution of whatever conflicts they are mired in. |
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The conflicts of the time have been forgotten as this embittered old man has been apotheosised into an elder statesman. |
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Since the feast is movable, the changes are often made to avoid Easter week conflicts. |
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This should also be the last election decided by the whims and conflicts of interest of 32 publicly unaccountable officials. |
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These conflicts are played out in political arenas across the world assessing guidelines and regulations. |
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Cultural singularity cannot prevail in a commercial world because monotony conflicts with the consumer's natural curiosity. |
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New types of weapons and equipment were in armed conflicts in the Middle East. |
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There's an eight-way associative cache line for resolving conflicts on a LRU basis. |
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You deal with difficult situations efficiently and resolve conflicts with tact. |
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When conflicts between the senses occur, vision tends to bias both auditory and tactile perception. |
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Our service-men and women would probably suffer the same kind of traumas which have hit combatants from past conflicts. |
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That way, it would save face for me and avoid any further conflicts with Tinka and Victor. |
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Their concern is that utopian aspirations towards a new peaceful world order will simply absolutize conflicts and make them more intractable. |
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This has led to conflicts between the Mandingos and other Liberians regarding land use, ownership, and access. |
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The danger of war is growing even now as social tensions and conflicts increase. |
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Such planning can help avoid clearance conflicts when it comes time to tension the system. |
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This includes a plan to introduce a mediation programme to deal with conflicts between staff. |
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A rational approach and a balanced perspective is needed to resolve conflicts with logic and clarity rather than with an emotional approach. |
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The distinct types of marginalization derived from the social conflicts are often themes addressed by these authors. |
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His last Will and testament attempted to anticipate possible conflicts among the heirs. |
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It's the mother of all tribal sectarian conflicts and it's hard to articulate it without taking sides. |
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Adults are also discouraged from intervening in conflicts that arise between the children. |
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The unusually bloodless conflicts of the past 12 years have made political leaders somewhat risk averse. |
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Nonetheless, this era had the same conflicts as later periods, and established lasting policies toward immigrants and aliens. |
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The end of the Cold War has ushered in a new epoch of imperialist conflicts. |
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This intense competition for water created conflicts, particularly between Indians and Spaniards, but also within Indian and Spanish communities. |
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Of course there are conflicts between races and ethnicities and nationalities, call them what you will. |
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His task will be to resolve potential conflicts between Westminster and Holyrood before they become unresolvable issues. |
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Criticizing such antics is an easy game as it seems that they borrow trouble where some care and research would prevent such energetic conflicts. |
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When it comes to conflicts of interest among states holding veto power, the Security Council is incapacitated. |
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While the contestations within the field of gender and sexual identity are important, they may also be symptomatic of larger conflicts. |
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Religious traditions have played a key contributory role in perpetuating conflicts about this nettlesome issue. |
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Its life is about short-term conflicts, blazing rows in the pub, so to speak, mysterious plots and unfathomable motivations. |
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In other conflicts, too, Roman armies seemed to have unwonted difficulties. |
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World War One was a total war, and in such conflicts, restraints are cast aside. |
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Indeed, this war continued in the wake of ongoing internal conflicts in several of the belligerent nations. |
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Racial conflicts are being encouraged with vastly exaggerated figures and myths. |
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This region used to be the bedrock of conflicts and cold War politics and so forth. |
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As we see even today there are many conflicts among believers of the same faith. |
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She has a major obsession to end all ethnic conflicts and separatist movements throughout the country. |
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But the thinking behind it is consistent with the rather timorous, hands-off approach to recent conflicts. |
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He thinks that the monument should be a memorial to people who died in all the conflicts, not just the two world wars. |
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In such grammars, conflicts among semantic and syntactic constraints are resolved in terms of ranking. |
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It runs into unsurmountable conflicts between the political project to which it is committed and the lures of its Gothic aesthetics. |
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How do we measure when or how Australia should bring its influence to bear in faraway conflicts? |
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Klare provides thumbnail summaries of numerous conflicts great and small, from the South China Sea to the headwaters of the Nile. |
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In time people realized that such actions could trigger needless conflicts among themselves. |
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The solution to conflicts such as this is obviously not to put the police back under the military 's thumb. |
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Those veterans had served in several conflicts including the bitter in-fighting of Algeria and the desert war in the Sahara. |
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In the last century the same conflicts led to the First World War and continued to be a bone of contention throughout the Second. |
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Our experience in conflicts over the past decade has revealed the changing nature of warfare. |
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As a result, conflicts over rights and responsibilities required intense negotiation and mediation. |
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At the local level, some municipalities have promoted arbitration to resolve conflicts. |
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This included local military forces that were mobilized during inter-tribal conflicts or foreign threats. |
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But that doesn't quite happen, either, if one is to believe the still smoldering conflicts over birth control that turn up in this study. |
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Gambians tend to be soft-spoken and gentle in demeanor, seeking to avoid noisy conflicts and striving toward quiet settlement of disputes. |
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He or she would administer a force of civilian peacekeepers for operations abroad and would work to mediate international conflicts. |
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This can be appreciated by balancing the forces as an excess of one can lead to misunderstandings, conflicts and suffering. |
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Guys are willing to thrash things out with each other when there are conflicts. |
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State policy for ensuring information security during military conflicts has a prognostic, organizational and administrative function. |
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The introduction of muskets, as a major item of trade and barter, was the catalyst for the many conflicts which broke out. |
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Marx was emphatic about the need for abundance, for he thought that scarcity made conflicts unresolvable. |
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They did this despite warnings from a number of quarters that the secessionist acts would provoke violent conflicts between ethnic groups. |
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If the United States continues to enter conflicts as a partner of a multinational force, it will have to observe international laws. |
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The parish council is worried about the visual impact of the hydropower plant and possible conflicts with recreational boating. |
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Both of them have a history of misunderstandings and conflicts with the leadership. |
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Such a combination suggested that misunderstandings and conflicts with the magistrates would be a thing of the past. |
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The battle would be a succession of hand-to-hand conflicts to board or to repel boarders. |
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Her old life meshed oddly with her new, creating so many conflicts Syd felt as if she were on a drug trip. |
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In a number of irregular conflicts, guerrillas and government forces alike regarded an unwillingness to help as aiding and abetting the enemy. |
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At the time of writing, neither the Abkhaz nor the Ossetian conflicts have been resolved. |
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It is quite normal that conflicts of interests may sometimes lead to quarrels or even fights. |
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Serious diplomatic quarrels and armed conflicts have begun over less significant misunderstandings. |
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I wonder if there are lots of other conflicts dragging on in other regions below the media radar. |
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Our guidelines on conflicts of interest cover what our journalists are allowed to write. |
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As you read this, over 30 wars and conflicts rage around the world, mostly created, maintained, and aggravated by men. |
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The committee also raised doubts about the Ministry's ability to learn the lessons from previous conflicts. |
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During conflicts, persistent, well-organized minorities can adroitly handle and dominate their opponents. |
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To an outsider trying to decipher the roots of such conflicts, the situation is, well, Kafkaesque. |
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The aerospace industries are a central arena for trade conflicts between the US and Europe. |
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Thus, once the new year has begun, I'm afraid that conflicts regarding the power plant issue will continue to erupt. |
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Some of the most successful films are based on, in part or in whole, military conflicts that actually happened. |
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Newer outfits can also face potential conflicts of interest, or at least be short on quality. |
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The billionaire broadcaster was ordered to do jury duty after getting out of two previous summonses by citing conflicts with her work schedule. |
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The three accused are certainly not in the category of the political or military masterminds behind the conflicts and atrocities. |
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My freedom to roam at will conflicts with the farmer's need to make a living and to rear the crops and livestock we all need to exist. |
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Hence even if disarmament were achieved, conflicts would eventually provoke rearming. |
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Their personalities complemented each other and seemed to personify George's psychic, inner conflicts. |
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At times the optimism bordered on naivete, suggesting possible conflicts down the road. |
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He talks about the struggles he had not only with overcoming his ligament injury but the conflicts amongst the pioneering traceurs as parkour diversified. |
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Tribal, sectarian and territorial conflicts made it a constantly turbulent place, despite the hammer of Ottoman rule. |
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Feeling forced into areas inhabited by other native communities has led to unprecedented conflicts between the Mashco-Piro and the Native Amahuaca community of Santa Cruz. |
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There are many overlapping and interwoven conflicts in the Middle East, where the enemy of your enemy may still be your enemy. |
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Effective collaboration often takes place only when the would-be collaborators enlist hierarchical line managers to resolve conflicts between competing organizational silos. |
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Lawmakers are often part-time and have business interests that pose conflicts. |
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The key thing here is that the use of handguns in gang conflicts is at least in part an equilibrium problem. |
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If a friend or family member gets involved there can often be conditions attached and emotional pressure on how to use the money or conflicts can be created. |
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I may it clear that I have no authority to wade into conflicts between parents, and my role is not that of mediator. |
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As such, they also provide a kind of ethnographic record of tensions and conflicts in a society. |
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Biologist Mattson is alarmed by the abrupt 2008 rise in grizzly mortality from conflicts both with livestock and hunters. |
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Schools with great booster clubs don't like the program because of the conflicts that can arise between their sponsors and the ads the 3rd party sells. |
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A spokesman for U.S. Central Command, which oversees the conflicts in both the Middle East and Afghanistan, disputed this notion. |
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Instead, at this pace Smith brings the reader right around to the conflicts of Soviet old, but mutated thanks to added plutocracy. |
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What conflicts do exist between them derive from misunderstanding and accident. |
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Rebels in Africa trade in children to fund their conflicts and obtain child soldiers. |
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For instance, a student unfamiliar with neo-Marxist philosophy probably won't be inclined to grasp the significance of some kinds of class conflicts. |
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Why is violence against women central to so many of the conflicts that plague the planet today? |
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Many deserve a medal for weathering these conflicts and never giving up on romantic love. |
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Also, the committee identified several conflicts of interest between the arb and the people it was investigating. |
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He went about researching the war meticulously, soaking himself in the plentiful documentary material from this most media-infiltrated of conflicts. |
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You are triumphant in conflicts after a period of strife and opposition. |
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The rules of warfare are established by international law with a view to regulating the conduct of belligerents in the course of international armed conflicts. |
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It opens with a bombastic set piece, but it was far less compelling than many of the little, dialogue-driven conflicts that arose. |
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How this orientation necessarily conflicts with the basic mandate of the museum to be a repository for its permanent collections is the realization that haunts these writings. |
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But most tend to reconcile conflicts through heart-to-heart talks. |
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The new government will be pressed to reconcile religious conflicts and work out a policy that is considerate of the poor and mitigates the ill effects of economic growth. |
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The differences between the two parties, he said, were not of a fundamental character, despite the partisan conflicts and mud-slinging of the campaign. |
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Each political party had its representatives in the airline's management, and the tensions between the Walloon and Flemish halves created further conflicts. |
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The Eurasia Union leader assured Gubareva that Moscow will support its friends in all kinds of civil conflicts in Ukraine. |
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The fleur-de-lis symbolizes France, where the unit saw its first combat experience during World War I, while the feathers denote the conflicts in which the unit participated. |
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Dramatic seasonal variations coupled with movements, conflicts, and alliances of Turkic and Mongol tribes caused the people of Central Asia often to be on the move. |
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China's leaders believed that immediate democratization, instead of serving to reconcile the conflicts of interest created by economic change, might instead exacerbate them. |
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Fortunately for civilization, none of these conflicts, with the possible exception of the Cuban missile crisis, pushed the world to the abyss of global thermonuclear war. |
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Women in most cultures are required to embody the ethnicity of a culture and our bodies become the battlegrounds for conflicts between men of different cultural groups. |
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After announcing his resignation to the university's board of supervisors, he acknowledged that the conflicts with faculty members had worn him down. |
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It was a time of guerrilla war, when the local conflicts over land and water resources that emerge in any rural setting threatened to brand villagers as rabble-rousers. |
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Amendments made to the Geneva Conventions in 1977 specified that prisoners taken in internal and civil conflicts must still be considered prisoners of war. |
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At the same time it conflicts with theistic beliefs that many parents seek to instill in their children that life results from guided, rather than unguided change. |
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What the off-campus get-togethers do is foster the ability to handle the inevitable conflicts that arise. |
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Similarly, bioethical issues needed more analysis as they are emerging as major conflicts in research particularly in pharmaceutical and genetic research. |
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A peaceful world is in the interests of all people, and a world torn by civil conflicts or wars over land, water, and wealth degrades the lives of all. |
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Bilek argues that by supplying the gangs with drugs, guzman is fueling their conflicts. |
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In both conflicts, the long-term solution lies in a comprehensive response to the growing threat. |
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Our conflicts are similar to managing deadly outbreaks of disease, with clear, conclusive victories seldom known or celebrated. |
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They claim that this arm's-length arrangement would give the BBC the benefit of substantial advertising revenue whilst avoiding direct conflicts of interest. |
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Although Disney's company was riven with conflicts after his death, the firm emerged in the mid-1980s as the prototype of a successful international media conglomerate. |
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Nick Matthew reffed the first match with almost no conflicts. |
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The fact is that military organizations, for the most part, study what makes them feel comfortable about themselves, not the uncongenial lessons of past conflicts. |
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A year later, sander resigned due to reported conflicts with Prada's CEO Patrizio Bertelli. |
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Dedicated to labor history, the first section focuses on internal conflicts within the Wilhelminian SPD as well as perceptions of labor parties during the Weimar period. |
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And Julie Copeland speaks to Indian artist Nalini Malani in Brisbane, whose timely installation reworks Hindu myth to reflect India's terrible, contemporary conflicts. |
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Under both the law and the ethics governing armed conflicts, sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. |
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The film, though set during the English Civil War, ignores conflicts between Cavaliers and Roundheads to dwell on the seedy lawlessness sown by the war. |
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Echo has documented all the crises of the post-Perestroika era, wars, conflicts, scandals, and protests. |
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The IRC is working with communities to restore health and education systems in areas where there are still violent conflicts. |
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While I do think the saints have spiritual maturity, often very saintly people and profoundly religious people struggle with other personality conflicts. |
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This conflict raised the important question of what happens when an Act of Congress conflicts with the Constitution. |
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Tension erupted as well, of course, between Dina and her parents, odd attacklike conflicts, suddenly, for no reason. |
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The Darth Vaders, Dr. Strangeloves and many people in positions of power have advocated the use of nuclear weapons to resolve conflicts. |
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Finally, I argued that moderate experimentalism and IAE can help resolve these different kinds of conflicts. |
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By emerging victorious from such conflicts, Britain has often been able to decisively influence world events. |
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Feuds were the standard means for resolving conflicts and regulating behavior. |
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This meant that in discussing conflicts between kingdoms, the date would have to be given in the regnal years of all the kings involved. |
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The exact causes and motivations for Rome's military conflicts and expansions during the republic are subject to wide debate. |
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They took the side of the Senate in most conflicts with the Princeps, invariably viewing him as being in the wrong. |
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Ultimately, these differences led to the outbreak of conflicts in which religion played a key factor. |
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Becket took refuge in France, and following this there were growing conflicts between Henry II and Becket. |
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McFarlane, suggest that the effects of the conflicts have been greatly exaggerated and that there were no wars of the roses. |
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Under Elizabeth, factionalism in the Council and conflicts at court greatly diminished. |
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The conflicts with Spain and in Ireland dragged on, the tax burden grew heavier, and the economy was hit by poor harvests and the cost of war. |
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Through the Revolutionary Wars, it unleashed a wave of global conflicts that extended from the Caribbean to the Middle East. |
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The Continental System caused recurring diplomatic conflicts between France and its client states, especially Russia. |
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Both battles involved forces of over 250,000, making them some of the largest conflicts of the wars so far. |
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It supplied most of the weapons used by the coalition powers throughout the conflicts. |
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The Times originated the practice of sending war correspondents to cover particular conflicts. |
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Members declare their financial interests in order to prevent any conflicts of interest. |
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Judges try to minimize these conflicts, but they arise from time to time, and under principles of 'stare decisis', may persist for some time. |
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The long conflicts of the period strengthened royal control over their kingdoms and were extremely hard on the peasantry. |
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The reigns of most of the Angevin monarchs were marred by civil strife and conflicts between the monarch and the nobility. |
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After the conflicts with the Danes, and following the 1088 rebellion against the Normans, Monkchester was all but destroyed by Odo of Bayeux. |
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Efforts were made to resolve the navigation conflicts upstream by building locks along the Thames. |
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These visitors also bring problems, such as erosion and traffic congestion, and conflicts over the use of the parks' resources. |
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These two objectives cause frequent conflicts between the needs of different groups of people. |
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Babbage was never able to complete construction of any of his machines due to conflicts with his chief engineer and inadequate funding. |
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Apart from its own conflicts, Pakistan has been an active participant in United Nations peacekeeping missions. |
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This established the preconditions for a series of conflicts, known as the French Wars of Religion. |
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One of Anselm's first conflicts with William came the very month he was consecrated. |
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Following similar conflicts over modernism, the Southern Baptist Convention adhered to conservative theology as its official position. |
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It seemed that the Crusaders had learned much about fortification from their conflicts with the Saracens and exposure to Byzantine architecture. |
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The play is sometimes given a historical setting, enabling audiences to reflect on the underlying conflicts. |
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This also seems to be the axis around which the plot conflicts in the play occur. |
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The strong support by Frederick, Prince of Wales caused conflicts in the royal family. |
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Originally Jennifer Lawrence was approached for a role, but due to scheduling conflicts had to decline the project. |
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In addition to territorial disputes, the League also tried to intervene in other conflicts between and within nations. |
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Their function is to enforce existing laws, legislate new ones, and arbitrate conflicts. |
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Further conflicts over the opium trade between Britain and Qing quickly escalated into the Second Opium War. |
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She has reigned through various wars and conflicts involving many of her realms. |
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Shifts of international power have most notably occurred through major conflicts. |
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Until France rejoined NATO, it was not represented on the Defence Planning Committee, and this led to conflicts between it and NATO members. |
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This goal conflicts with that of the unionists in Northern Ireland, who want the region to remain part of the United Kingdom. |
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This established the preconditions for a series of destructive and intermittent conflicts, known as the Wars of Religion. |
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Constantly raiding the Adriatic Sea, the Illyrians caused many conflicts with the Roman Republic. |
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But letters of marque were given out much more sparingly by governments and were terminated as soon as conflicts ended. |
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The series of conflicts takes its name Jacobitism, from Jacobus, the Latin form of James. |
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The French Revolutionary Wars were a series of sweeping military conflicts, lasting from 1792 until 1802, resulting from the French Revolution. |
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French success in these conflicts ensured the spread of revolutionary principles over much of Europe. |
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The Great Powers were able to keep these Balkan conflicts contained, but the next one would spread throughout Europe and beyond. |
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In this treaty, Germany, as part of the Central Powers, accepted defeat by the Allies in one of the bloodiest conflicts of all time. |
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Most Germans were relieved that the conflicts and street fighting of the Weimar era had ended. |
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The OSCE works to prevent conflicts from arising and to facilitate lasting comprehensive political settlements for existing conflicts. |
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Repeatedly emerging victorious from conflicts has allowed Britain to establish itself as one of the world's leading military and economic powers. |
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This power dynamic was important to the future and the latter conflicts of the Reich. |
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The Crimean War was one of the first conflicts to use modern technologies such as explosive naval shells, railways and telegraphs. |
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American domestic public concerns about intervening in foreign conflicts persisted from the end of the Vietnam War. |
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Success in Sierra Leone encouraged the Blair government to continue its support to Africa, particularly with regard to resolving conflicts. |
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The process of job automation conflicts with the capitalist property form and its attendant system of wage labor. |
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Brutal conflicts between ethnic groups have existed throughout history and across the world. |
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As in the case of Calfucura, many other bands of Mapuches got involved in the internal conflicts of Argentina until Conquest of the Desert. |
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Some commentators have said that special consideration must be given to the issue of conflicts of interest in alternative medicine. |
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His books often focus on the role of religion in society and conflicts between faiths and between the religious and those of no faith. |
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Barry was set to compose Thomas and the Magic Railroad but left due to scheduling conflicts. |
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Drug and alcohol use escalated tension between the three members, and conflicts between Bruce and Baker eventually led to Cream's demise. |
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The Times was the first newspaper to send war correspondents to cover particular conflicts. |
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The exact extent of exclusive economic zones is a common source of conflicts between states over marine waters. |
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In the 1970s and 1980s, Ethiopia experienced civil conflicts and communist purges, which hindered its economy. |
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This increased level of immigration in turn caused some conflicts between newcomers and old settlers. |
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This distracts from cairns used as genuine navigational guides, and also conflicts with the Leave No Trace ethic. |
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The last years of Charles VII were marked by conflicts with his turbulent son, the future Louis XI of France. |
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Many Germans came to escape the religious conflicts and declining economic opportunities in Germany and Switzerland. |
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Such an education helps the individual navigate internal and external conflicts in life. |
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Much energy was expended during this period on conflicts between Anglicans and nonconformists over education. |
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Over the ages, the geographically important town has been the site of many conflicts, particularly between the English and Welsh. |
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Glamorgan, now falling under the protection of the crown, was also involved in the conflicts of the crown. |
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The fortifications played an important part in the conflicts in North Wales over the coming centuries. |
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Other than commercial hunts, killer whales were hunted along Japanese coasts out of public concern for potential conflicts with fisheries. |
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Besides hunting, pinnipeds also face threats from accidental trapping, marine pollution, and conflicts with local people. |
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Lothar II ceded lands to Louis II in 862 for support of a divorce from his wife, which caused repeated conflicts with the Pope and his uncles. |
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Elimination of conflicts with other directions of traffic dramatically improves safety and capacity. |
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These conflicts drained it of resources and undermined the economy generally. |
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There was a later round of conflicts between 1780 and 1810, which some argue was a separate set of wars. |
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The Gulf of Thailand became more overfished than ever, causing acrimonious conflicts between domestic artisanal and large-scale fishers. |
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Economic development in the Early modern period was hampered by religious wars, conflicts with the English, epidemics, and storms. |
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A number of military conflicts in European history have stemmed from the application of, or disregard for, Salic law. |
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While the barbarian invasions of the 4th century and later mostly occurred by land, some notable examples of naval conflicts are known. |
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More and more countries signed the Geneva Convention and began to respect it in practice during armed conflicts. |
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Also, the additional protocols of 8 June 1977 were intended to make the conventions apply to internal conflicts such as civil wars. |
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In the 1990s, more delegates lost their lives than at any point in its history, especially when working in local and internal armed conflicts. |
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This program has met with mixed results, sometimes causing conflicts between the locals and the recently arrived settlers. |
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The invasions were unsuccesful, yet both Dai Viet and Champa agreed to become tributary states to Yuan dynasty to avoid further conflicts. |
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For this reason, water is a strategic resource in the globe and an important element in many political conflicts. |
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For political gain, many leaders fanned ethnic conflicts, some of which had been exacerbated, or even created, by colonial rule. |
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In the 21st century, however, the number of armed conflicts in Africa has steadily declined. |
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Much like the Odyssey, there is even a set ritual which must be observed in each of these conflicts. |
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The causes of World War I included many factors, including the conflicts and antagonisms of the four decades leading up to the war. |
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When military conflicts broke out between the Ottoman Empire and enemies, Greeks usually took arms against the empire, with few exceptions. |
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After 1940, conflicts between the Kuomintang and Communists became more frequent in the areas not under Japanese control. |
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However, the unity of the ODECA was limited by conflicts between several member states. |
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The parliament started around 1980, and its primary goal was to resolve conflicts in Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador. |
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Lesser, often spontaneous conflicts, such as brawls, riots, revolts, and melees, are not considered to be warfare. |
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The emigration process also determined a long series of conflicts between the Greek cities of Sicily, especially Syracuse, and the Carthaginians. |
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Regionalism and regional conflicts were a prominent feature of ancient Greece. |
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Cyclists, pedestrians and motorists make different demands on road design which may lead to conflicts. |
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As villages and towns expanded into neighboring areas, conflicts with other communities inevitably occurred. |
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It concerns the armed conflicts of the Dacian tribes and their kingdoms in the Balkans. |
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Apart from conflicts between Dacians and neighboring nations and tribes, numerous wars were recorded among Dacian tribes as well. |
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Usually missi were selected from outside their respective regions in order to prevent conflicts of interest. |
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The Alemanni were continually engaged in conflicts with the Roman Empire in the 3rd and 4th centuries. |
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Throughout the third and fourth centuries there were numerous conflicts and exchanges of varying types between the Goths and their neighbors. |
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The 1990s were plagued by armed conflicts in the North Caucasus, both local ethnic skirmishes and separatist Islamist insurrections. |
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In Navarre, these conflicts became polarised in a violent struggle between the Agramont and Beaumont parties. |
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The studies cited above investigated the dynamics of rido with the intention of helping design strategic interventions to address such conflicts. |
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The triggers for conflicts range from petty offenses, such as theft and jesting, to more serious crimes, like homicide. |
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Military history is often considered to be the history of all conflicts, not just the history of the state militaries. |
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To him, cruelty was a criterion that differentiated the Wars of Religion from previous conflicts, which he idealized. |
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In some cases, these policies triggered bitter conflicts and further ethnic separatism. |
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