Hall deals with the process of contestation and what is required to replace embedded ideas, established interests and institutions. |
We need as much genuine debate and political contestation as a democratic system such as ours can muster. |
The Tudor dynasty's right to the throne was vulnerable to contestation, and the theaters were thought able to influence public opinion. |
As major metropolises and sites of colonial contestation, all five cities, including Paris, share similarly complex histories. |
And these representations changed appreciably over the centuries, through a process of both contestation and assimilation. |
Because in the past nobody believed that the two-party contestation becomes a primary feature of party politics in Japan. |