A stalemate had been reached in which the opposition could not unseat the government by force and the government could not reassert full control. |
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He scored eight of Brazil's 18 goals to reassert his global pre-eminence on the most celebrated stage of all. |
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He moved quickly to reassert UN centrality in emergencies across the globe. |
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He had previously helped his father and brothers reassert government control during a period of lawlessness and had served as a Minister. |
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These writers interpret bits of disconnected data to reassert the old dichotomies of men versus women, of biology versus culture. |
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Together, the works reassert Paul's apostolic authority, legitimately mandated to the papacy. |
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Political alignments would shift, the military would reassert itself, and the country face international isolation. |
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By the end of the decade, Khmer nationalism began to reassert itself against the traditional Vietnamese enemy. |
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At this juncture, I reassert that population change in a given area is conditioned by its intrinsic and extrinsic factors. |
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Some landlords attempted to reassert forced labor dues, which the peasants heroically resisted. |
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Grands Jours, which the king convoked irregularly, provided a means to reassert royal authority in problematic areas. |
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This ruinous legacy continues to reassert itself at each crucial turn of the country's history. |
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To escape the budget syndrome, we need to reassert core values and revalue faculty expertise and participation. |
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He left the running of the country to his deputies, playing them off against each other, intervening only to reassert his authority. |
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I suspect they probably bided their time until the furor over the May conference died down, before waiting to reassert their power and control. |
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He has received heavy support from powerful generals, who may want to reassert their traditional authority in policymaking. |
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As the appeals court weighs the case, some members of Congress are moving to reassert their authority. |
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France, however, hoped to reassert control over Indo-China and reoccupied the main cities. |
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Her longing to reassert control over her body deepened after a series of stillbirths and miscarriages left her with only one healthy child, Elma. |
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This situation incites schools to strongly reassert their specific role of stimulus to reflection and critical aspiration. |
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It must clearly and practically reassert the inescapability of the Universal Human Rights bill and firmly fight any breach of these rights. |
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Without such reiterative habits, unfairness will reassert itself in every field. |
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Hence its brazen efforts to reassert control, by any means necessary. |
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Once freed of the dead hand of communism, old national and racial rivalries were likely to reassert themselves. |
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It was time to reassert their supremacy even if that meant tempering the casual flamboyance that had been the trademark of the great 1970 side. |
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Absent a dramatic retrenchment in global capital mobility, it appears inevitable that the floating system will reassert its primacy. |
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The ceasefire will give relative moderates both within the regime and among the opposition an opportunity to reassert themselves. |
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Berlusconi was not present at the hearing, which analysts had billed as crucial for his ability to reassert control over his fragmenting party. |
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Napoli never quite looked like title contenders, but they did reassert their quality in moving back ahead of the rest of the pack. |
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It did not matter, but they had to reassert themselves because they wanted the government. |
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There is a clear need to reassert users' trust by being more transparent about data collection activities. |
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However we reassert, as we have done consistently, that an effective college requires the assumption of individual political responsibility. |
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The report states that in Chile, for example, indigenous groups have also mobilized to use the legal system in a bid to reassert their claims. |
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There is a need to reassert in political terms the central importance of the Mediterranean on the political agenda of all participants. |
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States should develop plans to reassert responsible control over their prison populations and to effectively protect prisoners from each other. |
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It is therefore necessary to reassert the basic premises of historical materialism and the corresponding programmatic principles of Marxism. |
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One certain consequence was that Britain and Russia agreed on a future policy of non-intervention, thus making it possible for China to reassert its authority. |
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The problem for the ruling class is how to reassert such hegemony. |
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Now, 25 years later, the world is looking again at Eastern Europe as Russia begins to reassert itself. |
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Occasionally she would solicit women in attempt to reassert her power in the relationship. |
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Loyalists recruited in North Carolina to reassert colonial rule in the South were decisively defeated, subduing Loyalist sentiment. |
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In the following century, the Byzantines managed to reassert their control in western and northern Anatolia. |
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If we were looking to reassert our reputation with our neighbours, if we were looking to reassert our reputation as a country that could count in the world and change the world, this would be an ideal opportunity. |
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The decisions and declarations that they have adopted at several European forums and their regular bilateral exchanges have provided opportunities to reassert that agenda. |
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Fredrick's intention was to reassert his authority over the Italian cities. |
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In 1651, Fort Nassau was dismantled and relocated in an attempt to disrupt trade and reassert control, receiving the name Fort Casimir. |
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Under the brilliant command of Totila, the Goths were able to reassert themselves to a degree. |
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This, however, rapidly changed after 1330 when Edward III set out to complete his conquest of Scotland and to reassert his power in France. |
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Edward I had died in 1307 and his heir Edward II moved an army north to break the siege of Stirling Castle and reassert control. |
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He has threatened to veto the reforms unless they are substantially improved as part of attempts to reassert his party's independence after last week's events. |
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Scientists believe a mutation caused the ancient trait to reassert itself as a form of atavism. |
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It also called upon all parties to renew their commitment to multilateralism and to reassert the central role of the United Nations in addressing racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. |
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Third, in today's political and economic environment, any policy that seeks to maintain or reassert political or social stability is likely to trump anything that lies in its path. |
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Nevertheless the scenarios and the new priorities which were validated last December reassert the will to build a compact city, polycentric and sustainable. |
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He therefore wishes to reassert in this regard the Organization's commitment to supporting on a priority basis activities that aim to foster broader participation by women in these areas. |
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Louis VI succeeded to the French throne in 1108 and began to reassert central royal power. |
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Hizbullah's arms continue to pose a key challenge to the Government's monopoly on the legitimate use of force and all efforts to reassert Lebanon's sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence. |
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The attempt to reassert a prophetic role with the cross-denominational Hikoi of Hope in 1998 was still underpinned by those enduring tensions. |
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Can the U.S. reassert its role in Asia without irking Beijing? |
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Under ordinary conditions, the Castroite rebels would have followed in the footsteps of countless similar movements in Latin America, wielding radical-democratic rhetoric to reassert bourgeois control. |
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When the Archbishop of Canterbury, Theobald of Bec, died in 1161 Henry saw an opportunity to reassert his rights over the church in England. |
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Henry set about extending royal justice in England to reassert his authority and spent time in Normandy shoring up support amongst the barons. |
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Thus, the creation of a rival institution represented a Tory response to reassert the educational values of The Establishment. |
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After a poor result for the Labour Party in local elections, Tony Blair, Britain's prime minister, sought to reassert his authority by reshuffling his cabinet. |
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It is something we must review if we are to reassert our democratic credibility in this, the 50th year since the signing of the Treaty of Rome, for if we fail to keep up with the times, public disillusion will grow. |
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As activity had been artificially stimulated by expenditure on war, the iron law of diminishing returns would reassert itself, thereby limiting the likelihood of population growth. |
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After Sweden permanently broke away from the personal union, Denmark tried on several occasions to reassert control over its neighbour. |
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For my part, I unhesitatingly ask the committee to reassert forcefully that it is important to have-and this is part of Canada's identity-a public broadcaster. |
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No, we must reassert, with sincerity, values which are all too often distorted, compromised, forgotten or corrupted in order to cover up mean-minded interests and excesses of power. |
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So, this white paper wants to reassert first line welfare work. |
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The Ottoman government responded by putting to death the Greek patriarch, by terrorising the Greek populations in areas still under its control, and by sending troops to attempt to reassert their authority. |
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Can Hibs reassert themselves and channel that early-season mojo? |
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As we mourn those who lost their lives, we must, as Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon noted, reassert our commitment to human rights, which was desecrated at Auschwitz and by genocides and atrocities since. |
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However, after defeating the Sardinian forces at Custoza on 24 July, Radetzky was able to reassert Austrian control over Milan and northern Italy. |
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The Taliban exploited weaknesses in the Afghan government, among the most corrupt in the world, to reassert influence across rural areas of southern and eastern Afghanistan. |
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Wilhelm II wanted to reassert his ruling prerogatives at a time when other monarchs in Europe were being transformed into constitutional figureheads. |
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White Beech is her account of her decade-long attempt to 'rehabilitate' this 'steep rocky country', to allow the complexities of the ancient ecosystem to reassert itself. |
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