Reliance on these principles contributes to the relative autonomy and structural integrity of the legal system. |
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As the autonomy of the local church kicks in, oppressive views of women in diaconal roles will increasingly get kicked out. |
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They will continue to remain as a pressure group from the outside and keep their autonomy and independence. |
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Loss of autonomy and control may cause the young child a great deal of anxiety. |
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It is therefore consonant with, indeed an expression of, the personal autonomy that morality should protect and nurture. |
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As Philly moves from total dependency into the first few baby steps of autonomy, the impact on everyone is delightful and devastating. |
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I mean, historically, universities fought very hard to preserve their independence and autonomy. |
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As the peace talks progressed, they have conceded to settle for regional autonomy. |
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Recent events have exacerbated intra-Kurdish antagonisms, but also concretized the autonomy that already exists. |
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However, the extension to minority groups elicits the potential for internal autonomy. |
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In a larger practical sense, however, evangelical revivalism shared basically Unitarian assumptions about the moral autonomy of children. |
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Complex heterogeneity is not suppressed by any refinement of focus, nor are simplicity, autonomy, elementariness, ever approached. |
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The cases reek of legal paternalism and legal moralism but little reference is made to ideas of personal autonomy or sovereignty. |
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According to this incompatibilist conception of autonomy, autonomy is incompatible with determinism. |
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This section began with a question about the relations among Kantian views of autonomy, rationality, and agential separateness. |
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Native Americans fought against the US Army in the nineteenth century to maintain autonomy and protect their traditional hunting grounds. |
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Each panel has a visual autonomy that, paradoxically, enhances the painting's sense of unity. |
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While initially established by national governments, supranational EU institutions develop a degree of autonomy from the control of governments. |
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Depending on context, autonomy can be valued or deprecated, viewed as both counter to or in accordance with local understandings of behaviour. |
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The traditional leaders are concerned that the newly demarcated municipal boundaries will infringe on their autonomy in traditional areas. |
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Actions that are consistent with the dignity and autonomy of moral agents are intrinsically good. |
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All virtue is contained in autonomy, all vice in its absence, and all morality is summarized in the imperatives that guide the will. |
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In 1992, negotiations on the new federal Constitution deadlocked over the issue of Slovak autonomy. |
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Yes, in Kantian terms, respect for autonomy is closely related to the categorical imperative of treating people as ends and not means. |
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The growth of independence is surely a part of becoming autonomous during adolescence, but autonomy means more than behaving independently. |
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It embodies an anxiety about the threat these women pose to male autonomy, subjectivity, and cultural authority. |
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Because heteronomy and autonomy reflect political and cultural rather than purely linguistic factors, they can change. |
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The House of Representatives is also currently deliberating a bill on special autonomy, which is expected to provide another peaceful solution. |
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The advent of the female birth control pill greatly aided women's struggle for autonomy and fulfillment. |
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Workers experience autonomy within the work organization when they feel competent to act alone. |
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It still fulfilled prescribed ecclesiastical functions, but its euphony and its expressive power showed the way toward artistic autonomy. |
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The comparatively lower salaries mattered less because doctors enjoyed autonomy and esteem. |
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Consequently, the struggles for self-determination took various forms as independence to greater autonomy. |
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Low levels of autonomy and low self esteem are likely to be related to worse health. |
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What happens to autonomy and compassion when assisted suicide and euthanasia are legally practiced? |
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It was a study on building political autonomy through maintaining ancestral knowledge and the traditional economy. |
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Contemporary thinking about medical ethics attaches much importance to respecting the patient's autonomy. |
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One of the first casualties of the illiberal centralization of power characteristic of democracy has been the loss of local autonomy. |
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The political dilemma of balancing a competition-focused business with autonomy for nations and regions is obvious. |
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It first took up arms in 1949 to demand autonomy from the central government of the time. |
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Their demand for more autonomy is undermined by the brutal campaign that they wage against innocent civilians throughout Russia. |
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Distinctive Flemish and Walloon parties, fighting for language rights and more autonomy, if not outright independence, mobilized support. |
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These accords granted indigenous communities autonomy and respect for traditions and customs. |
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It is demanding autonomy for the rich eastern lowland region where the natural gas reserves are concentrated. |
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In comparison, the long vowels, which can occur in open syllables, show a higher degree of phonological autonomy. |
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Epstein's crabbed view of autonomy also highlights the bankruptcy of the libertarian view of child-rearing. |
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Indeed, the early autonomy for the young child of divorce may preclude adolescent individuation. |
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In the context of rights, a man may achieve maturity, but it is only upon his father's death that he gains true jural and ritual autonomy. |
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The amount of emotional space it takes to have a feeling of adultness and autonomy will vary from relationship to relationship. |
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Throughout adulthood, autonomy continues to develop whenever someone is challenged to act with a new level of self-reliance. |
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All, however, recognized that it was an affront to academic freedom and a violation of faculty autonomy. |
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The renaissance of Gagauz culture and language is of important status in the new autonomy within Moldova. |
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You have plenty of autonomy, and once you begin profit sharing your bank balance could grow rapidly. |
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Therefore a primary demand is that women regain greater autonomy with regard to their sexuality and procreative capacities. |
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And therein lie the roots of the Sikh struggle for autonomy in India today. |
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Not surprisingly, the Masters of Arts, primarily the philosophers, fought for the independence and autonomy of their discipline. |
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Peaceful protests were from the beginning dealt with violently, fuelling local sympathies for autonomy or independence. |
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Increased behavioral autonomy facilitates secondary processes such as role exploration, identity formation, and individuation. |
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Conservative believers in individual liberty and personal autonomy should allow citizens to freely choose a life partner whether gay or straight. |
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He also re-echoed that he would not hold any office or political position once Tibetans are allowed limited autonomy. |
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Arguments opposing treatment centred on the supremacy of autonomy as an ethical principle. |
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Corruption is getting worse thanks to the regional autonomy which allows officials in provinces to enrich themselves. |
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The process of economic reform had inevitably increased individual autonomy. |
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Because a spacecraft is unable to carry much fuel and cannot refuel in-flight, other routes to autonomy have had to be explored. |
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Due to professional autonomy, no one can challenge their refusal to abandon this entirely discredited methodology. |
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They could be functionally alike, in the sense that all of them could, and sometimes did, claim political autonomy. |
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A relatively small group of nationalists demand outright independence for the island while others prefer autonomy within the French Republic. |
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Offers from Khartoum of federal autonomy failed to persuade the increasingly active guerrillas to lay down their arms. |
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Under it, women are treated as legal minors and denied legal autonomy to conclude their own marriage contracts. |
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The old Second World enjoyed a certain measure of autonomy from the capitalist global system. |
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Balfour said yesterday that he recognised the autonomy of sports federations, but autonomy needed accountability and responsibility. |
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The professional section of the bourgeoisie gradually lost its former autonomy and social distinction. |
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This allowed for greater autonomy within the boundaries of the Federal Republic. |
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Due to centuries of social struggle, Basques now live in relative autonomy. |
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If they are given autonomy, they will ensure that no neighbor meddles in their affairs. |
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Many people with whom he spoke in the provinces had expressed a desire for self-determination and perhaps autonomy. |
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To me, the exciting element that unites all these stories is autonomy and self-determination. |
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The concepts inherent in this right are the bedrock upon which the principles of self-determination and individual autonomy are based. |
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Prior to 1917 the Bolsheviks had opposed the concept of federalism, preferring regional autonomy within a unitary state. |
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This artistic endeavor is about choice, autonomy, self-expression, trust, and sharing. |
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Only current Italian battleships, also designed for near seas, had such limited autonomy. |
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By disempowerment, the tribunal referred to the denigration and destruction of Maori autonomy, or self-government. |
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At various times in the twentieth century, they have also tried to attain autonomy or self-rule. |
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This approach rejects the autonomy and self-sufficiency of neoclassical economics. |
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He argued against such policies as central bank autonomy, tight money, fiscal austerity, and social retrenchment. |
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A culture of low trust and high control produces low autonomy, risk-averse, time-serving behaviour. |
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Through mentorship, nurses can help others grow, while encouraging each mentee toward self-actualization and autonomy. |
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For its part, the government has proposed constitutional changes to give limited autonomy to the north and east. |
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A former province of a state is being prepared for substantial autonomy and self-government. |
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Instead, according to critics, it has become a miasmal swamp of convoluted regulations that disrupt physician autonomy and patient well-being. |
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The central government has said it is prepared to give the province autonomy within a federal system. |
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Both parties combine calls for greater regional autonomy with demands for a larger share of tax revenues for themselves. |
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To optimists among them, at the very least the war seems to offer an opportunity for enhanced autonomy within a federal state. |
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Meanwhile, Montenegro sought increased autonomy within the federation and began making moves toward that goal. |
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The fact of local, militarist autonomy was acknowledged by the creation of the political councils. |
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The trend to emphasize the autonomy of form and dismiss subject matter was sharply criticized by the art historian. |
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It flows from the principle of autonomy and the minimalist notion of welfare already developed in Chapter 2 above. |
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Its aim was to suspend the moves towards separation for three months, whilst negotiating greater autonomy within a federal structure. |
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The rhetoric of rights legitimates claims and mobilizes support for groups demanding autonomy. |
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I have insisted that the autonomy of the editor must be fully protected by the Trust, which was minuted at the last meeting. |
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However laudable these goals, the implementation often bulldozes individual rights and autonomy, just as the old eugenicist planners did. |
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They are laws which offend against the principle of autonomy and they are laws which place both doctors and patients at risk. |
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It's important that you're both able to feel a sense of independence and autonomy. |
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Perhaps she was talking about women being self-sufficient, with jobs and resources, freedom and autonomy. |
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The government formally granted universities autonomy over academic and financial affairs. |
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A major task of adolescence is autonomy, and parental controls tend to fall away rapidly during this period. |
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They were reportedly training in Afghanistan with Uighur groups seeking independence or greater autonomy from China in the Xinjiang region. |
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There is a strong association between the principles of autonomy and academic freedom and the idea of a university. |
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Patients scheduled to undergo surgical procedures often say that they sense a loss of control and autonomy. |
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I went on to talk about the need for community autonomy from Government intervention. |
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Such autonomy encourages what to him is a desirable element of calculated risk-taking. |
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The Habsburg Monarchy was strained by the demands of different nationalities for autonomy. |
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The war arose from rivalry between Britain's claim to be the paramount power in southern Africa and the desire of the Boers for autonomy. |
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Their libertarianism was more aesthetic than political, an assertion of personal autonomy against repressive philistinism. |
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Unlike subjects of experiments or clinical trials, they retain a great deal of personal autonomy as well as control over the research itself. |
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Veteran students joined senior faculty in resisting Bolshevik assaults on academic autonomy. |
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The ethical principle of autonomy asserts the primacy of patients' individual choices. |
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In addition, the cantons and over 3,000 communes have preserved their autonomy and decide numerous issues by popular vote. |
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We might wish to have individual autonomy and to be independent of the world we find ourselves in, but this is not in any way realistic. |
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How can physicians best promote the autonomy of minors while respecting parental autonomy? |
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They will do and say anything to muzzle those who bear witness to the truth, and challenge their radical views of personal autonomy. |
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Faculties also seemed to be unhelpful despite the fact that they have a certain level of autonomy in examination procedure. |
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Subsequently, the army enjoyed an increasing amount of autonomy from political control, and even from the military establishment. |
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I've had the autonomy that comes with being my own boss and the greater remuneration that comes from working in the States. |
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Self-assertion and a desire for autonomy are important components of genuine citizenship, as is a distrust of bossy authority. |
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But many women today are choosing not to marry at all, opting for autonomy and to retain control over their own children. |
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She continually encourages growth, development and autonomy of all members of her team. |
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And do we want to start down that slippery slope to losing control of our hard-won autonomy? |
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Respect for personal autonomy and individual human rights was the common thread joining all issues presented at the World Social Forum. |
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It emphasizes democracy, decentralization, and the sovereignty of individual cantons, which give much autonomy to individual communities. |
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Like other populists, Chavez disdains any party institutionalization that might constrain his personal autonomy. |
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This is coercion, an usurpation of personal autonomy, and deeply destructive of human freedom. |
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It ensures individual autonomy of a sort, but also acts as a major solvent of local Aboriginal authority structures. |
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Personal freedom, individual autonomy and maximum access to information have long been seen as desirable ends in themselves. |
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In initiating this exchange with his mother, Henry is likely to have been making a statement about his own autonomy and transition into manhood. |
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Due to the volatility of the situation, managers tend to withdraw power from the working levels lest local autonomy causes dissonance. |
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Obviously, drinking and intoxication by alcohol complicated notions of individual autonomy and free volition. |
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A commitment to autonomy, in opposition to this, holds that autonomy is good in a non-relative sense. |
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Others, such as caciques, used the mission system itself to improve their material interests and cultural autonomy. |
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For many faculty members, what is at issue is not the money, but quality control and professional autonomy. |
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In the 1990s, governors of oblasts and presidents of republics acquired significant political autonomy. |
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It has multiple aspects, including the denial of autonomy and subjectivity and the ideas of ownership, fungibility, and violability. |
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You will regard it as inimical to the British way, as incompatible with liberty, as an affront to your maturity and autonomy. |
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The government will begin implementing the regional autonomy and fiscal decentralization policy in January. |
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On the contrary, the autonomy of phonology is one of the firmest results to have come out of the past couple of decades of phonological research. |
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The Kurds are worried they will lose their autonomy and the Sunnis are worried that Shi'ites will take revenge on them. |
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They have their own de facto border controls, laws, and an 80,000-strong army, and will be loath to permit any rollback of their autonomy. |
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A sharp rise in contractual obligations could, de facto, wipe out his precarious autonomy. |
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Above all it heralded the end of the proconsular autonomy hitherto enjoyed by the representatives on mission. |
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There is a price to be paid for foreign capital, in terms of loss of national economic autonomy, freedom of decision, and sovereignty. |
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It allows the creative subject to be transformed in and by versions of reality as a result of giving up the pretence to creative autonomy. |
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In its place, he sent his emissary to negotiate a plan for greater autonomy. |
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The normative characteristics of the modem subject include identity, boundedness, autonomy, interiority, depth, and centrality. |
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Many Finns readily took part in the Russian Revolution of 1905, whereupon autonomy was restored. |
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It depends on, and perpetuates, an eighteenth-century liberal ideal of autonomy, individualism and unencumbered choice. |
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Under the British, ethnic minorities generally were able to retain some autonomy. |
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The mandatories believed they should have the autonomy to administer their mandates without oversight from Geneva. |
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After all, the finer points of fiscal autonomy are not generally discussed down the local bar. |
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Government is clearly not willing to offer devo max or fiscal autonomy as an option. |
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He will do this, he says, unless his people, the Ijaw, who live on top of Nigeria's oil fields, are granted autonomy. |
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The devolution of power under the new regional autonomy laws has had an impact on fisheries management. |
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This relationship has provided the basis for social mobilization and collective protest, both socially and politically, as well as financial autonomy. |
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Of course, the fact that Tris faces and eviscerates her own anxiety lends the simulation scene a veneer of victory and autonomy. |
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Despite the physical and spiritual barriers of the cloister, nuns used their dowries and other property interests to exercise fiscal influence and autonomy. |
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The privacy and autonomy historically associated with the family is seen as a problem, something to be limited and doled out as a reward for appropriate behaviour. |
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The Court began by setting out the principle of national procedural autonomy, as qualified by the conditions of equivalence and practical possibility. |
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The biographer would enjoy no autonomy or independence whatsoever. |
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Emphasize the patient's autonomy and control over the situation. |
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Agencies operate with a good deal of autonomy, within the overall framework set by the transgovernmental network of interior and justice ministries. |
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The French government had planned to give more autonomy to universities, giving them freedom to increase tuition fees as well as opening the doors to big business. |
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Even after devolution, local government had little autonomy. |
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This means that their criterion for resolving doubts, their criterion of private perfection, is autonomy rather than affiliation to a power other than themselves. |
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Had modern Tatar autonomy not come about so painlessly, it would have been easy to read the bloodshed as yet another case of the inevitable clash of civilizations. |
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The diminution of the scope and autonomy of the private sphere constrains the potential for development of the individual through intimate relationships. |
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This portrays a loose teleology, a soft concept of creation, one that permits genuine, though not ultimate, integrity and autonomy in the creatures. |
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The exercise of skill, mechanical know-how and autonomy certainly provided working class men with an important avenue to display their manly qualities. |
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Gordo, the head post, is sending out bafflegab to media and students stating that what he is doing is returning autonomy to post-secondary institutions. |
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For example, does this increase in autonomy mean that the Hauraki Islanders have to dispose of their own rubbish on their island instead of barging it back to Auckland? |
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The government portrays the new laws on 'ordinary' autonomy as a large concession to all the resource-rich provinces which are showing secessionist symptoms. |
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It simply cannot stomach the sense of some form of autonomy. |
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By curtailing the autonomy of the self-determining individual, authoritarian public health policies infantilise society, weaken democracy and diminish humanity. |
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Flat, forested, and landlocked between Poland, Ukraine and Russia, it had never truly known national autonomy. |
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Without fiscal autonomy Scots will always end up going to London furiously tugging their forelocks as they push forward the national begging bowl. |
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The communal life embodied in the vine and the branches image presents a strong challenge to contemporary Western models of individual autonomy and privatism. |
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Only then will we find a therapeutic solution that fully restores autonomy to those who have been robbed of independence. |
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Zaporozhian Cossack autonomy declined as the Russian Empire grew in power and reach, imposing its might over the Tatars. |
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The reduced complement minimises training costs and increase combat efficiency by making more space, while a larger payload enhances the ship's autonomy. |
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He said their promotion should be be given first priority in the city administration's plan to promote new teachers in its bid to gain regional autonomy. |
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Marriage is either an institution that has an existence and autonomy apart from the state or it's a construct that only comes into being after being created by positive law. |
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Before leaving moral philosophy, we should consider approaches to autonomy which do not depend directly on Kantian moral philosophy as a framework. |
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In Kant's enormously influential moral philosophy, autonomy, or freedom from the causal determinism of nature, became prominent in justifying the human use of animals. |
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However, to Sinhala extremists, including many in the Buddhist hierarchy, any talk of even limited autonomy for the country's Tamil minority is tantamount to treason. |
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Often, autonomy for robots is set at par with being mobile without an umbilical cord that connects the robot to a power supply and sometimes to an off-board computer. |
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In the foreground is their condemnation of various parochialisms, patriotisms, and unchosen loyalties that limit personal autonomy and voluntarism. |
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The autonomy granted by decriminalising suicide and attempted suicide in section 1 enables a would-be suicide to change her mind and seek help without fear of prosecution. |
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Now numbering 5,000 across the country, charters receive tax dollars to operate with considerable autonomy and innovation. |
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They were convinced that autonomy meant unfettered creativity. |
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Once you're out on the streets you do have a slight degree of autonomy. |
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His essay in the catalogue takes numerous swipes at universalist definitions of art and at the notion of art's autonomy from the larger social world. |
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Therefore, freedom suggests autonomy and the absence of social bonds. |
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As in Ireland, there is a deep rift between nationalists who can accommodate to a kind of autonomy and those who hold to the purist separatist ideal. |
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Tavi Gevinson, the 13-year-old wunderkind blogger, makes clear her respect for autonomy. |
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A British overseas territory, Bermuda has significant autonomy, although the governor still has control of the police, military and aspects of the judiciary. |
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In his hands, spatial autonomy becomes equivalent to cultural stagnation. |
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With such heavy-handedness behind the camera, I'm not sure how talented actors could emerge with any autonomy or achieve any genuine soul-bearing. |
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The tragic irony here for an artist like Schoenberg was that the only way to realize art's concept, autonomy, meant that he had to indirectly affirm the system he was fleeing. |
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The empirical and contingent conditions of effective agency set the terms of permissibility because it is through effective agency that autonomy is expressed. |
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Such symptoms rob individuals of their dignity, autonomy, and personhood. |
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In fact, autonomy here is about choosing the right man, and not settling for the dullish Lord or Viscount or advertising executive waiting in the wings. |
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The transaction carries overtones of moves to reduce the autonomy of rural African Americans with the debt peonage of sharecropping or exploitation in industrial mills. |
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Several local governments started issuing forest concession licenses since the implementation of regional autonomy last year as part of efforts to boost their revenues. |
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Britain retained their loyalty and affection by progressively conceding their demands for greater freedom and autonomy over a period of more than a century. |
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Each old person has their own view on the value of autonomy and on the approach of death, and there is an ethical dimension to most management decisions in psychogeriatrics. |
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The superabundance of media is truly unprecedented, and so is the challenge that they pose to our autonomy as thinking individuals rather than just consumers. |
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Hedlund's model involves the extreme extension of operating autonomy to business units in a group whether they are branch offices or subsidiaries. |
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Enhanced autonomy for universities and new powers for university chancellors will lead to the raising of tuition fees or the introduction of enrolment fees. |
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In the new market economy, how do colleges and universities compete for scarce resources from public and private sectors without compromising their integrity and autonomy? |
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I loved the simplicity of it, I loved the autonomy of it, and I loved the language of abbreviations that instant messaging has. |
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It privileges, inter alia, the interests of boys and men over the bodily integrity, autonomy, and dignity of girls and women. |
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The point at which autonomy should be handed over to the child is less clear when parenting children with cognitive disabilities. |
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These people, like those in the breakaway regions of Georgia, wanted independence and autonomy, not Russian rule. |
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As for Hamas or Hizbullah, being given nuclear weapons would increase their capacities as well as their autonomy. |
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Academics, meanwhile, have been queuing up to back fiscal autonomy. |
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Many Aboriginals are lukewarm on autonomy proposals because they are more concerned with day-to-day issues than the future survival of their culture, Kysul Lousu said. |
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One was the relative autonomy that France had earned through its collaborationist government in Vichy. |
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Rights from cultural autonomy to freedom of information to free speech all need to be recalibrated according to the powerful role of global media today. |
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Ryaas, a former director general of regional autonomy, suggested that the two feuding parties reconcile their differences in order to reduce the political tension. |
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Whether a doctor withholds material information or simply ignores a lack of consent, she betrays the patient's trust and thereby undermines his autonomy. |
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Rather, his appeal proceeded from a radical message of individual autonomy and decentralized political power. |
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It was to bring together in indissoluble union a variety of differing regions who would never consent to union without some protections of their own autonomy. |
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However, important features of parenting, such as restrictiveness or psychological control, coerciveness, autonomy granting, and warmth, are not addressed. |
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In 1972, after liberation, the tribal people asked for autonomy, with a separate legislative body, and a retention of the 1900 Regulations against non-tribal settlers. |
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But their aspirations could be canalised into a grant of effective autonomy. |
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Consequently, the Dumnonii probably retained a greater degree of political autonomy than the forcibly conquered tribes living to the east. |
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From the 11th century onward, the Angevins had autonomy within their French domains, effectively neutralising the issue. |
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Under the Basic Law of December 1963, limited autonomy was authorized under a joint legislative body for the territory's two provinces. |
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In 1889, when county councils were created in England, the municipal borough became a county borough with even greater autonomy. |
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Changes in status of autonomy leading up to and after independence are not listed, and some dates of independence may be disputed. |
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The autonomy, or home rule, of the Federal District, was granted by the federal government, which in principle, has the right to remove it. |
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The Spanish Constitution of 1978 granted autonomy to the nationalities and regions of which the Kingdom of Spain is composed. |
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The party campaigns for the rights of indigenous people and argues for greater autonomy for these individuals. |
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By the close of the century, autonomy for Ireland within the United Kingdom, known as Home Rule, was regarded as highly likely. |
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Some smaller settlements also enjoyed some degree of autonomy from regular administration as boroughs or liberties. |
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Campaigns for regional autonomy for the North have seen little electoral support. |
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East Pakistani intellectuals crafted the Six Points which called for greater regional autonomy, free trade and economic independence. |
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An insurgency began in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, due to demands by the region's indigenous people for autonomy. |
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The Hill Tracts region suffered unrest and an insurgency from 1975 to 1997 due to a movement by indigenous people for autonomy. |
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Its main objective is attaining greater autonomy for Cornwall through the establishment of a legislative Cornish Assembly. |
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The Liberal Democrats recognise Cornwall's claims for greater autonomy, as do the Liberal Party. |
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The Scottish Education Department ran the system centrally, with local authorities running the schools with considerable autonomy. |
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Both groups, however, held to local autonomy and eschewed binding creedal authority. |
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Public hospitals in Singapore have autonomy in their management decisions, and compete for patients. |
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However, university professors still utilized some autonomy, at least in the sciences, to choose epistemological foundations and methods. |
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However, many public universities in the world have a considerable degree of financial, research and pedagogical autonomy. |
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Later that year, southern autonomy was restored when an Autonomous Government of Southern Sudan was formed. |
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Control of the islands reverted to Denmark following the war, but in 1948 home rule was introduced, with a high degree of local autonomy. |
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The dependencies that remain generally maintain a very high degree of political autonomy. |
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It stipulated that Hong Kong would retain its laws and be guaranteed a high degree of autonomy for at least 50 years after the transfer. |
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Jersey has moved further than the other two Crown dependencies in asserting its autonomy from the United Kingdom. |
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The table shows the areas and degree of autonomy and budgetary independence. |
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Although their political structure and autonomy varies widely, union leaderships are usually formed through democratic elections. |
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The 1935 Act provided for more autonomy for Indian provinces, with the goal of cooling off nationalist sentiment. |
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Some of these were later absorbed into the Ottoman Empire, while others were granted various types of autonomy during the course of centuries. |
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Mehmed allowed the Orthodox Church to maintain its autonomy and land in exchange for accepting Ottoman authority. |
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Top officials reported to Hitler and followed his policies, but they had considerable autonomy. |
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The Wir Shetland movement was set up in 2015 to campaign for greater autonomy. |
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In the Autonomous Communities of Spain, the autonomy statute is a legal document similar to a state constitution in a federated state. |
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Where these factors are unimportant, in unitary states with limited regional autonomy, unicameralism often prevails. |
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Denmark, Finland, France, the Netherlands, and Portugal are federacies, meaning some regions have autonomy but most do not. |
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Spain and Italy have system of devolution where regions have autonomy, but the national government retains the right to revoke it. |
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Pershing, who had a high degree of autonomy as commander of the armies in France. |
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The General Treaty reserved foreign affairs and defence to the United Kingdom but allowed internal autonomy. |
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Kosovo's formal autonomy, established under the 1945 Yugoslav constitution, initially meant relatively little in practice. |
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Today, the Southern Basque Country within Spain enjoys an extensive cultural and political autonomy. |
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In contrast, the desire for greater autonomy or independence is particularly common among leftist Basque nationalists. |
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In 1884 an attempt was made at autonomy with the formation of two West Indian Conferences, however by 1903 the venture had failed. |
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Such autonomous churches maintain varying levels of dependence on their mother church, usually defined in a Tomos or other document of autonomy. |
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Several dependencies and similar territories with broad autonomy are also found within or in close proximity to Europe. |
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Buridan was said to believe that the donkey would die, because he has no autonomy. |
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Professional groups like the Chamber of Commerce maintain their autonomy from the government. |
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The Sikhs attached themselves to the Indian state with the promise of religious and cultural autonomy. |
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Despite this, states have much less autonomy to create their own laws than in the United States. |
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The Revolution of 1848 in Prague, striving for liberal reforms and autonomy of the Bohemian Crown within the Austrian Empire, was suppressed. |
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Parliament's strength was such that the Crown turned to corruption and political management to undermine its autonomy in the latter period. |
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Leaside had its own municipal government until 1967, while Mount Royal continues to enjoy autonomy from the City of Montreal. |
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Some federations are called asymmetric because some states have more autonomy than others. |
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Calman Plus should not be confused with full fiscal autonomy, although neither concept has been definitively defined. |
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It advocates more autonomy for the region and its positions are very close to the Socialist parties. |
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The loss of prosperity caused social unrest, and Wallonia sought greater autonomy in order to address its economic problems. |
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Belgium is a federal state made up of three communities and three regions, each with considerable autonomy. |
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This is done to preserve the autonomy of the Welsh Assembly, and to prevent legislative confusion. |
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Welsh Labour has autonomy in policy formulation for those areas now devolved to the Welsh Assembly, as well as candidate selection for that body. |
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Welsh culture and political autonomy has been reasserted increasingly since the mid 19th century. |
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The revolt was suppressed, but Cyprus managed to maintain a high degree of autonomy and remained oriented towards the Greek world. |
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Restricted autonomy under a constitution was proposed by the British administration but eventually rejected. |
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In 1946, by popular referendum, Italy became a republic, with Sardinia being administered since 1948 by a special statute of autonomy. |
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The French government is opposed to full independence but has at times shown support for some level of autonomy. |
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However, the issue of Corsican autonomy and greater powers for the Corsican Assembly continues to hold sway over Corsican politics. |
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In 2000, Prime Minister Lionel Jospin agreed to grant increased autonomy to Corsica. |
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In addition, legislation granting Corsica a greater degree of autonomy was passed. |
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