Example sentences of "it has [be] argued that [art] " in BNC.

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1 It has been argued that a de-clawed cat can learn to use its teeth more when grooming .
2 It has been argued that a new spatial division of labour has been created which has changed the relative attractiveness of locations ( Massey and Meegan 1982 , Massey 1984 ) .
3 It has been argued that a State may intervene , even forcibly , in the affairs of another State without violating Article 2 ( 4 ) of the United Nations Charter , or the norm of non-intervention where the intervention is justified on humanitarian grounds , for example to stop gross violations of human rights .
4 Thus , it has been argued that a set of at least tacit beliefs that underlay aesthetic modernism also underlay the birth of classical sociological theory in the work of Weber , Simmel , and Durkheim .
5 The officers , whether beneficiarii , stratores or regionarii , might have been in charge of , and therefore accommodated in , the mansio , if one existed , though it has been argued that a beneficiarius , usually only a legionary , was too junior in status to have charge of such an important building .
6 It has been argued that a better measure of familial aggregation is the ratio of prevalence among relatives to that in the general population , but this ratio alone is also of limited value since , for a given heritability , it varies inversely with population prevalence .
7 It has been argued that a special , hybrid type of right should be introduced for computer programs ; something between a patent and copyright .
8 Sometimes it has been argued that the evolution was the other way round ; and more recently still it has been argued that no evolution in either direction took place .
9 Despite the inherent difficulties in comparative work it has been argued that an international perspective has always been implicit to some extent in the study of industrial relations .
10 It has been argued that an appropriate definition of central in this context would be information related to risks and potential risks in a situation .
11 It has been argued that the Famine led to a long-term levelling process amongst the afflicted peasantry , thus keeping the ‘ kulak ’ at bay in the stricken areas .
12 Sometimes it has been argued that the evolution was the other way round ; and more recently still it has been argued that no evolution in either direction took place .
13 Indeed , it has been argued that the government is the most likely source of excess demand inflation : through its policy measures , it can finance its own spending by raising taxes , by borrowing or by printing money .
14 This seems surprising since it has been argued that the existence of joint auditors may have facilitated the BCCI fraud .
15 It has been argued that the primitive features are innate , and the tendency to make binary oppositions is natural to human cognition .
16 Transient deterioration in neuropsychological function has been shown convincingly during short periods of experimental hyperphenylalaninaemia , and it has been argued that the changes may be due to neurotransmitter deficiency .
17 It has been argued that the best predictor of behaviour is not the possession of knowledge per se but behavioural intentions which are themselves predicted by attitudes and the subjective norm for the acceptability of the behaviour in question .
18 It has been argued that the Conservative government has in its policy changes ( if not publicly voiced ) moved towards a more Keynesian stance .
19 On the other hand , it has been argued that the burning of genealogies to which Julius Africanus refers was perpetrated not by Herod , but by the Romans after the revolt of A.D. 66 .
20 It has been argued that the present day focus of international law is upon disputes relating to parties ' interests in satisfying needs , and values , rather than upon formalistic attention to rights .
21 It has been argued that the ‘ package deal ’ nature of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea further strengthens the argument against its selective application .
22 It has been argued that the North Atlantic Treaty , for example , is not a legally binding agreement and that such political treaties form a distinct category of ‘ soft law ’ .
23 It has been argued that the rationale of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties , Articles 7455 and 46456 should be applied to the institutional context for the protection of third parties .
24 It has been argued that the limited success of children in referential communication tasks is due to a large extent to the tasks being extracted from a meaningful framework .
25 More recently , however , it has been argued that the differences in Hebrew style which are used to define the pentateuchal sources have no significance in the light of ancient literary conventions , and that a fresh approach to this aspect of the criticism of the Pentateuch is required .
26 It has been argued that the ultimate object of most conventions is that the rules of government should accord with the wishes of the majority .
27 It has been argued that the present procedure for the passage of legislation does not provide effective scrutiny , that Parliament simply legitimises that which the Government has decreed .
28 It has been argued that the safeguards are inadequate .
29 It has been argued that the present law pays too great a regard to the need to preserve public order and does too little to facilitate peaceful protest , e.g. wide police powers to impose conditions to preserve the peace ; the restrictions on spontaneous demonstrations .
30 It has been argued that the mass production element of Fordism was never as strongly developed in the UK as in , for instance , the United States .
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