It is likely that alcohol abuse is not a unitary concept, and that different instruments measure different aspects of alcohol abuse. |
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The council is the lowest spending unitary council per head of population and had the tenth lowest council tax in the United Kingdom. |
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Paradoxically, this is way above the national average 13 for a unitary authority. |
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They say Rochdale council is considering earmarking the land for a possible business park as part of a review of its unitary development plan. |
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This was a large-scale Utopian vision, based on the possibility of constructing a new city guided by the concepts of unitary urbanism. |
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The authors begin by discussing the simplest kind of lawmaking factory, a unitary state with pluralistic political institutions. |
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To derive unitary permeability coefficients, however, a slightly different method is required. |
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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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It is the only unitary authority in the country to gain the award in the rural economy category. |
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If the county disappears and we become a unitary authority, we do not have a redundant building and, if not, I am sure we can rub along nicely. |
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It is also clear, however, that this is not a unitary or monolithic phenomenon. |
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Kaluznin also worked in the area of geometrical algebra, particularly on arrangements of subspaces in Euclidean and unitary spaces. |
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If the government insisted on a unitary state that would Islamize and Arabize the entire country, the south would demand independence. |
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In other parts of the world, where unitary Empires and not rivalrous states were the norm, such economic transformation did not take place. |
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Do the words have a unitary value which is extended in different ways in different contexts? |
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Excluding Scotland, with its devalued Parliament, the British system of government is unitary, with sovereignty concentrated in Parliament. |
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She outlined changing the constitution from presidential to parliamentary government and from a unitary to a federal system. |
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The company recognizes the need for hybrid extrudables with unitary construction to function in versatile, custom configurations. |
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Social support was not a unitary construct exerting a uniformly positive effect on outcomes. |
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In another application, unitary catheters can feature radiopaque markers to determine distance. |
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According to Davies, Medieval Ireland was less a unitary commonwealth after the pattern of England than a clustered multitude of sovereignties. |
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Instead, parade ground drill became a means of teaching soldiers about the value of organized, unitary action. |
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Each twin formed a unitary entelechy, a single living organism made of psyche and soma, still rotating in opposite directions to each other. |
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He created a nationalist and revolutionary rhetoric in order to transform the heterogeneous state into a unitary entity. |
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We are creating more meshed services where the seemingly unitary application is really a composite of linked calls across the Internet. |
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The unitary conductances in patches with a single active channel are stable for the durations of the recordings. |
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Compared to members of other unitary authorities, Swindon councillors get a bad deal. |
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Psychoanalysis disrupts notions of a unitary, centred and rational self by its emphasis on an inner world permeated by desire and fantasy. |
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You have a central unitary state now where power is all located in the capital, and that power must be shared over time. |
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The fractional entities of vitality are embraced in the oneness of the unitary Ego. |
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Personalities are not unitary, folks, and you don't know the whole of a person based on one album, no matter how confessional it may seem. |
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Town hall sources said the changes to the city's unitary development plan would not mean an end to new homes and flats. |
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It does not represent a single unitary concept of liability. |
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We are not in the area of common law or a unitary system of government. |
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In particular, there appears to be little hope for any unitary concept of subjective well-being. |
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Other policies include the centralization of state power in a unitary form of government in order to be able to contain the centrifugal forces of ethnicity. |
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Unlike Geertz's 1966 definition, the type of symbolic participation I am pointing to here does not involve the inculcation of a unitary or unified cultural style. |
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Not so very different, after all, from the fundamentalists back home who are forever devising Procrustean means to arrive at unitary cultural identities. |
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Indonesia is prone to collapse despite claims that it is a unitary state. |
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The Netherlands is a unitary state governed by a central body. |
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Formally the United Kingdom remains a unitary state, but Scotland now has its own legislative Parliament and Wales a National Assembly with wide executive powers. |
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It decides to pounce on a prey, to hide in the grass, to take off and fly, so the organism does behave as a very unitary entity. |
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It assumes that all colonists had a unitary concept of idiocy. |
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Certain non-Buddhists who accept rebirth accept the transitory nature of mind and body, but they believe in a self that is permanent, changeless and unitary. |
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The unitary set consisted only of a brightly lit room where the sisters resided, furnished with a table and a few chairs, a pallet, and a floor-standing mirror. |
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For this reason we believe that larger unitary options that could be proposed for North Yorkshire are inherently unsuited to delivering good local services. |
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For 110 years, it has remained a fractious but unitary organization. |
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By doing so, she challenges the concept of English as a unitary, linear, and continuous entity and invites readers to engage with cultural translation. |
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The human subject, conceived as a unitary self capable of autonomous action and meaningful moral judgement, is one such fiction with which we have deceived ourselves. |
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The process of defining oneself is relative, necessarily weaving the threads of the past and the present as well as the self and non-self into a unitary cloth. |
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In 1798 Holland and Switzerland had both become unitary and democratic republics, the Batavian and the Helvetic, under the patronage of the Directory. |
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Blackpool and Blackburn with Darwen are unitary authorities do not come under county council control. |
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The Lancashire Constabulary covers the shire county and the unitary authorities. |
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For Wales, there is data on the Welsh language and population data on unitary authorities. |
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In 1986, the West Midlands County Council was abolished and Coventry became administered as an effective unitary authority in its own right. |
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Windsor is part of the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead which is administered by an elected unitary authority. |
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Another example of shared and pooled sovereignty is the Acts of Union 1707 which created the unitary state now known as the United Kingdom. |
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The Netherlands is a representative parliamentary democracy organised as a unitary state. |
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Aruba, with its own constitution, is a representative parliamentary democracy organised as a unitary state. |
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Sint Maarten is a centralised unitary state, with similar administrative characteristics to Aruba. |
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Instead, the Kingdom is said to have characteristics of a federal state, a confederation, a federacy, and a devolved unitary state. |
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Since the abolition of decentralised Urban and District Councils in 1999, Hong Kong is now a unitary territory subdivided into 18 districts. |
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The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is an example of a unitary state. |
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At the top was the High King, who received tribute from the other kings but did not rule Ireland as a unitary state. |
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Also, the Treaty of Union of 1707 was important in creating the unitary state which exists today. |
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The UK was formed as a unitary state, though Scotland and England retained separate legal systems. |
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Poland began to form into a recognizable unitary and territorial entity around the middle of the 10th century under the Piast dynasty. |
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The two unitary authorities of Dumfries and Galloway in the west and the Scottish Borders in the east cover almost all of the Southern Uplands. |
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In 1996, Swansea became one of 22 unitary authorities with the addition of part of the former Lliw Valley Borough. |
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The City of Newport, which includes rural areas as well as the built up area, is the seventh most populous unitary authority in Wales. |
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Typically unitary authorities cover towns or cities which are large enough to function independently of county or other regional administration. |
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In 1996, the Dundee City unitary authority was created following implementation of the Local Government etc. |
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The first elections to the Highland Council were in 1995, when the unitary council was created under the Local Government etc. |
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Where these factors are unimportant, in unitary states with limited regional autonomy, unicameralism often prevails. |
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In a unitary state, sovereignty resides in the state itself, and the constitution determines this. |
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Singapore is a unitary multiparty parliamentary republic, with a Westminster system of unicameral parliamentary government. |
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The LUA contains the unitary authority area and several towns, villages and suburbs outside the city's administrative boundaries. |
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The islands are geographically coextensive with Comhairle nan Eilean Siar, one of the 32 unitary council areas of Scotland. |
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In other cases, federated states have been created out of the regions of previously unitary states. |
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In 1950, United States of Indonesia dissolved itself into a unitary state and began to divide its component area into provinces. |
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The Highland region became the Highland unitary council area, and the functions of the district councils were absorbed by the Highland Council. |
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From that date, Northumberland County Council assumed its functions, and those of the other districts in its area, to become a unitary authority. |
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This is what set Europe apart from the technologically advanced, large unitary empires such as China and India. |
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In 1996 the region became a unitary authority area and the districts were wound up. |
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In 1996 administrative functions were taken over by the South Lanarkshire unitary council. |
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Others, such as Argentina and Mexico, have shifted between federal, confederal, and unitary systems, before settling into federalism. |
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Brazil, on the other hand, has experienced both the federal and the unitary state during its history. |
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A unitary state is sometimes one with only a single, centralised, national tier of government. |
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The distinction between a federation and a unitary state is often quite ambiguous. |
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The islands areas were unitary local government areas, exercising the powers of both a regional and district council. |
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Constitutionally, the United Kingdom is de jure a unitary state with one sovereign parliament and government. |
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In 1997, Darlington became a unitary authority and was separated from the shire county. |
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Durham Constabulary operate in the area of the two unitary districts of County Durham and Darlington. |
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In 1996, as part of the 1990s UK local government reform, Cleveland was abolished and its districts were reconstituted as unitary authorities. |
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West Yorkshire County Council was abolished in 1986 so its five districts became effectively unitary authorities. |
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As a unitary authority, the modern entity no longer has any districts, but Arfon, Dwyfor and Meirionnydd remain as area committees. |
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It is the second tier of local government in the area and is a unitary authority with a wide range of powers and responsibility. |
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It is in the historic county of Merionethshire, although currently administered as part of the unitary authority of Gwynedd. |
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It borders the unitary authority areas of Monmouthshire and Torfaen to the east, Caerphilly to the west and Powys to the north. |
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Its status as a unitary authority was restored on 1 April 1997, although it remains part of the ceremonial county of Staffordshire. |
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Italy has been a unitary parliamentary republic since 2 June 1946, when the monarchy was abolished by a constitutional referendum. |
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Sweden is a unitary state, currently divided into 21 counties and 290 municipalities. |
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This situation continued until 1 April 1997, when Hove and its wards became part of the new unitary authority of Brighton and Hove. |
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In December 2009, the Boundary Committee recommended a single unitary authority covering all of Norfolk, including Norwich. |
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The city regained its independence and county status on 1 April 1996, when Avon was abolished and Bristol became a unitary authority. |
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When conceived as a unitary continent, the form is generally the continent of America in the singular. |
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The new district would not be a unitary authority, with Somerset County Council still performing its functions. |
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However, on 1 April 2009 these five local authorities were merged into a single unitary authority called Wiltshire Council. |
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The Council of the Isles of Scilly was and still remains a separate unitary authority. |
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On 5 December 2007, the Government confirmed that Cornwall was one of five councils that would move to unitary status. |
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It was succeeded by the unitary authority, Cornwall Council, which incorporated the previous Cornish district councils as well. |
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In total, there are 39 unitary authorities that do not share the names of any of the ceremonial counties. |
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Bedfordshire and Cheshire are counties that consist of a number of unitary authorities, none of which has the same name as the ceremonial county. |
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For example, the four unitary authorities which make up Cheshire correspond to the same area as the Cheshire Constabulary. |
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Slough is the smallest unitary authority by area that is not also a ceremonial county and Cheshire East is the largest. |
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Hartlepool is the smallest such unitary authority by population and Cheshire West and Chester is the largest. |
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The Isle of Wight Council is a unitary authority covering the Isle of Wight near the South coast of England. |
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Five of the territorial councils are unitary authorities and also act as regional councils. |
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While officially the Chatham Islands Council is not a unitary authority, it undertakes many functions of a regional council. |
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It has been proposed in several unitary states to establish a federal system, for various reasons. |
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China is the largest unitary state in the world by both population and land area. |
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The United Kingdom has traditionally been governed as a unitary state by the Westminster Parliament in London. |
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The assembly refused to seat the delegates from the Banda Oriental, however, and Buenos Aires pursued a system based on unitary centralism. |
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A dialogue with Martha Rogers and David Bohm about the science of unitary human beings. |
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In this article, we prove that every unitary fusion category gives an example of a bicommutant category. |
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These acquired powers significantly diminished unitary power in these empires. |
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These include the cities of Cardiff, Swansea and Newport which are unitary authorities in their own right. |
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The ceremonial county of Durham is administered by four unitary authorities. |
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Constitutionally, the UK is a de jure unitary state, its parliament and government in Westminster. |
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Berkshire is split into unitary authorities, and Wokingham, Windsor and Slough have the next best GCSE results. |
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All of Berkshire's unitary authorities have results above the England average, with West Berkshire considerably above average. |
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A reform of local government abolished Cleveland and created several unitary districts. |
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In 1996 the East Riding of Yorkshire was reformed as a unitary authority area and a ceremonial county. |
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The unitary state was governed by a single parliament and government that was based in Westminster. |
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Lothian Regional Council was replaced by four unitary councils based on the former districts. |
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A square-free number is hyperperfect if and only if it is unitary hyperperfect. |
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From 1996, the term City of York describes a unitary authority area which includes rural areas beyond the old city boundaries. |
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The legal nature of the Kingdom of Denmark is fundamentally one of a unitary sovereign state. |
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By actively pursuing more than just a personal union of his realms, he helped lay the foundations for a unitary British state. |
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The earlier Greater Manchester County Council was abolished in 1986 so it is effectively a unitary authority. |
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It has also placed strong emphasis on lowering immigration, opposing multiculturalism, and encouraging a unitary British identity. |
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London is divided into London boroughs while the other regions are divided into metropolitan counties, shire counties and unitary authorities. |
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For ceremonial purposes, unitary authorities are considered to be part of the county to which they formerly belonged. |
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Although there is no county council in Berkshire, these six unitary authorities comprise the ceremonial county of Berkshire. |
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Calderdale has the lowest truancy rate for unitary authorities, almost half that of Leeds, followed by North Lincolnshire. |
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In 2010 Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly had the lowest GVA per head of any county or unitary authority in England. |
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Avon has since been abolished, and several mainly urban areas have become unitary authorities. |
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Ceremonial counties may comprise combinations of county council areas and unitary authorities. |
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On 1 April 1996, the unpopular counties of Avon, Humberside and Cleveland were abolished and their former area divided into unitary districts. |
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Also, the districts of Brighton and Hove were merged to form the new unitary authority of Brighton and Hove. |
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Berkshire was split into six unitary authorities, but not formally abolished. |
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The review led to the introduction of unitary local government in some areas but not in others. |
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In the majority of unitary authorities an existing district council took over powers from the county council. |
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Cornwall, Durham, Northumberland, Shropshire and Wiltshire became unitary authorities providing all services. |
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Regions were themselves abolished in 1996 and replaced by the current unitary council areas. |
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An example of such a city was Hereford, whose city council was merged in 1998 to form a unitary Herefordshire. |
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The city of Derby is a unitary authority area, but remains part of the ceremonial county of Derbyshire. |
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It has a county council based in Matlock and eight district councils and since 1997, a unitary authority area of the City of Derby. |
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The eight district councils in Derbyshire and the unitary authority of Derby are shown in the map above. |
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Nottingham City Council is a unitary authority based at Nottingham Council House in Old Market Square. |
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The city is administered by Portsmouth City Council, a unitary authority which is responsible for local affairs. |
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The Bangladeshi state has a unitary structure, with the central government in Dhaka. |
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With the exception of the Isles of Scilly, Cornwall is governed by a unitary authority, Cornwall Council, based in Truro. |
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Since 1890 they have been administered by their own unitary authority, the Council of the Isles of Scilly. |
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The Welsh unitary county covering the part of Gwent next to Herefordshire is Monmouthshire. |
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This Order established Herefordshire as a unitary authority on 1 April 1998, combining county and district functions into a single council. |
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Herefordshire is also commonly called a unitary district, but this is not official nomenclature. |
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Herefordshire is officially known as a unitary authority for local government purposes. |
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The Lieutenancies Act 1997 made Herefordshire a ceremonial county, covering the exact area of the unitary district. |
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Shropshire Council was created in 2009, a unitary authority taking over from the previous county council and five district councils. |
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The borough of Telford and Wrekin has been a separate unitary authority since 1998 but continues to be included in the ceremonial county. |
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In 1998 The Wrekin became a unitary authority, administratively separate from the county council, and became Telford and Wrekin. |
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In 2006 a local government white paper supported proposals for new unitary authorities to be set up in England in certain areas. |
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In 1998 Blackpool and Blackburn with Darwen became independent unitary authorities. |
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It is a unitary body, in that the power of the General Convention is not limited by the individual dioceses. |
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The latter tends to be the case in unitary states with parliamentary systems. |
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In local unitary authorities of England a motion may be carried into closure by filibustering. |
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The government was now fundamentally unitary, and all authority flowed from the center. |
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The existing unitary authorities of Halton and Warrington were not affected by the change. |
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Northumberland is a unitary authority area and is the largest unitary area in England. |
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The districts were abolished on 1 April 2009, the county council becoming a unitary authority. |
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During the 1990s a further kind of district was created, the unitary authority, which combined the functions and status of county and district. |
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In addition, some of the smaller counties such as Rutland, Herefordshire and the Isle of Wight are unitary authorities. |
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When the GLC was abolished in 1986 they gained similar status to the unitary authorities. |
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The eigenvectors of an orthogonal or unitary operator, corresponding to different eigenvalues, are orthogonal. |
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The presence of a unitary azeotrope curve is not a prerequisite for the generation of a ternary azeotrope. |
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However, for simplicity concentration will be on two systems, unitary and federal. |
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The European Parliament voted Tuesday in favor of the unitary patent protection package. |
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But this set of gates it is not enough for universality as it doesn't spawn the whole set of unitary operators. |
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Shropshire is to gain a new unitary council covering the whole county, Local Government Minister John Healey revealed. |
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More than 68pc of consultees support a district council-based plan to create three new unitary councils. |
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Figures for Durham and Northumberland were lost with the switch to the unitary councils. |
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The examples that naturally fall into this context include the unipotent orthogonal, symplectic and unitary groups. |
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Background appendices are included on mathematical concepts, quantum measurement, the harmonic oscillator, and unitary transformations. |
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Lionel Trilling has cautioned us that an idea derived from reading is not a unitary, irrefragable thing but something modified in its transmission. |
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It is constitutionally a unitary state, divided into nine departments. |
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As the power of the Federal government has increased, some people have perceived a much more unitary state than they believe the Founding Fathers intended. |
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While the state system was nominally federal, the party was unitary. |
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Devolution differs from federalism in that the devolved powers of the subnational authority ultimately reside in central government, thus the state remains de jure unitary. |
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Moldova is a unitary parliamentary representative democratic republic. |
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The port cities of Southampton and Portsmouth were split off as independent unitary authorities in 1997, although they are still included in Hampshire for ceremonial purposes. |
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In 2009 unitary authorities were created to replace each of the county councils of Cornwall, County Durham, Northumberland, Shropshire and Wiltshire. |
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In other areas a group of unitary authorities in several counties are grouped together to form police force areas, such as the Cleveland Police and Humberside Police. |
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In Wales, too, the Act established a similar pattern of counties and districts, but these have since been entirely replaced with a system of unitary authorities. |
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The ceremonial county of Wiltshire consists of two unitary authority areas, Wiltshire and Swindon, governed respectively by Wiltshire Council and Swindon Borough Council. |
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The Council of the Isles of Scilly is a sui generis unitary local government authority covering the Isles of Scilly off the west coast of Cornwall. |
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However, on 10 February 2010, it was announced that, contrary to the December 2009 recommendation of the Boundary Committee, Norwich would be given separate unitary status. |
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In October 2006, the Department for Communities and Local Government produced a Local Government White Paper inviting councils to submit proposals for unitary restructuring. |
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Caernarfonshire was abolished in 1974 and incorporated into the new county of Gwynedd, which became a unitary authority under the 1996 reorganisation. |
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The councillors were appointed by a Joint Committee of the unitary authority councils of Anglesey, Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Gwynedd and Wrexham. |
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The County Council assumed their functions and became a unitary authority. |
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A unitary upper Hessenberg matrix can be described by O parameters. |
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The unitary system means that patentees will have the option to apply to the European Patent Office for an EU unitary patent valid across the 25 participating member states. |
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Since the abolition of its two borough councils and restructuring of the county council as Isle of Wight Council in 1995, it has been a unitary authority. |
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With a total population of just over 2,000, the council represents fewer inhabitants than many English parish councils, and is by far the smallest English unitary council. |
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On 1 April 1995, the Isle of Wight became a single unitary authority. |
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The new unitary council will be named Cheshire West and Chester. |
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In 1968 Fermanagh County Council was reconstituted as a unitary authority. |
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But in The Journal on February 7, our MP Guy Opperman wants a return to the local councils which we had, not the unitary council we are supposed to have. |
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There again everyone was against a unitary council and look what happened. |
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The United Kingdom is a unitary state under a constitutional monarchy. |
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Local government in Wales consists of 22 unitary authorities. |
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Within the United Kingdom, a unitary sovereign state, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales have gained a degree of autonomy through the process of devolution. |
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These unitary authorities are responsible for the provision of all local government services, including education, social work, environment and roads services. |
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The new tier of local representation is aimed at tackling a so-called democratic deficit caused by the switch to unitary local government in Northumberland in April. |
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Fife Council, the unitary local authority for St Andrews, based in Glenrothes is the executive, deliberative and legislative body responsible for local governance. |
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It can be considered the opposite of another system, the unitary state. |
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In 1996 a new unitary council area of Argyll and Bute was created, with a change in boundaries to include part of the former Strathclyde district of Dumbarton. |
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All functions previously exercised by Berwick Borough Council were transferred to Northumberland County Council, which is the unitary authority for the area. |
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The new unitary Highland Council, however, adopted the areas of the former districts as council management areas, and created area committees to represent each. |
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As a unitary state, power is concentrated in the central government. |
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Independence was achieved in 1822 with the creation of the Empire of Brazil, a unitary state governed under a constitutional monarchy and a parliamentary system. |
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On 1 April 1997, Leicester City Council became a unitary authority. |
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In the 2011 census the population of the City of Leicester unitary authority was 329,839 making it the most populous municipality in the East Midlands region. |
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Local authorities in Scotland are unitary in nature but not in name. |
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It differs from a federation in that each constituent state has an independent government, whereas a unitary state is united by a central government. |
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In unitary states which consist of multiple constituent countries, such as the United Kingdom or the Kingdom of Denmark, each country will usually have a capital city. |
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Many unitary states have no areas possessing a degree of autonomy. |
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Of the 193 UN member states, 165 are governed as unitary states. |
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The majority of states in the world have a unitary system of government. |
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The ceremonial county area, including the unitary authorities, borders East Riding of Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, Lancashire, Cumbria and County Durham. |
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The first Local Characteristics tables for the topics of ethnicity, identity, language and religion for Output Areas, unitary and local authorities and regions. |
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The ceremonial county, including the unitary authorities, borders Cumbria, North Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, Greater Manchester and Merseyside in the North West England region. |
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Other institutions of the judiciary are the Federal Electoral Tribunal, collegiate, unitary and district tribunals, and the Council of the Federal Judiciary. |
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Like most European empires, it was ethnically very diverse, but unlike most European empires, it was more a system of tributes than a single unitary form of government. |
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Turner, Sethian Gnosticism and The Platonic Tradition, 364-67, Moderatus posited a unitary logos which retracts itself, thereby producing Quality and the First One. |
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The duality relations between the unitary and quasispin algebraic structures for the boson and fermion systems are extended to mixed boson-fermion system. |
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The Constitution of India is federal in nature but unitary in spirit. |
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The Localism Act 2011 introduced new arrangements which replaced the 'Standards Board regime' with local monitoring by district, unitary or equivalent authorities. |
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Each district council or unitary authority has an Electoral Register which is compiled by the Electoral Registration Officer listing all registered electors. |
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Bedfordshire and Cheshire County Councils were abolished with more than one unitary council established within the boundaries of the abolished council. |
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The borough failed to become an unitary authority in the 1990s local government reform and again, in 2011, when the motion was voted down by the council. |
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However, in 2016, the borough council and all seven Northamptonshire MPs proposed to draw up plans for Northampton to become an unitary authority. |
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The sample points are the eigenvalues of a certain unitary matrix, and the weights are the squares of the absolute values of the first components of the eigenvectors. |
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The metropolitan county councils were abolished in 1986 with most of their functions being devolved to the individual boroughs, making them de facto unitary authorities. |
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The 1990s led to the restoration of county boroughs under a new name, unitary authorities, which radically changed the administrative map of England. |
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The unitary authorities of Derby, Leicester and Nottingham have each written a joint LTP in collaboration with their respective local county councils. |
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In 2007, proposals to make North Yorkshire County Council a unitary authority, removing the layer of government represented by Craven District, were rejected. |
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In the case of Berkshire, there is no county council, as all of its former territory is now covered by six unitary authorities, unaffiliated with each other politically. |
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For instance, the unitary authority of Plymouth is traditionally considered part of County Devon, though politically it is not part of the county. |
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In practice, these function in the same way as other unitary authorities. |
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The UK is a unitary state with a devolved system of government. |
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In essence we are looking for some way to average the individual unitary matrices Uk. But a linear combination of unitary matrices does not remain unitary. |
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