Example sentences of "a [noun] for change " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Although Humphrey emphasises that one can not rule out the possibility of auto workers being a conservative force in the future , he does demonstrate that , at this particular historical-political conjuncture , their militant action provided a catalyst for change for the working class . |
2 | In this way the programme has been a catalyst for change in the various local communities , bringing about personal development and the widening of skills at family and community level , both for Community Mothers and the parents they visit . |
3 | Fundholding has acted as a catalyst for change in Britain 's general practice community — the ultimate outcome of the experiment remains to be seen . |
4 | Whether the particular objective is to provide school leavers with better general training for the labour market or to stimulate the development of more portable skills , it is hoped that government training initiatives , such as the Youth Training Scheme , will provide a catalyst for change . |
5 | I am a catalyst for change . |
6 | ‘ I see my role as being a catalyst for change , for getting the job done , so that means working as an integral member of the production team : joining the morning production meeting and taking my turn on the duty rota . ’ |
7 | This belief in the centrality of law — law to provide a framework for change — echoes throughout the legislation introduced since 1988 . |
8 | The move was really just a change for change 's sake — I was simply bored to tears by it all . |
9 | He used language , the politician 's only weapon , to build a momentum for change sufficient to carry Labour to power on a modernising platform . |
10 | LABOUR 'S policy review was a symbol of the party renewing itself and becoming again a force for change , Tom Sawyer , deputy general secretary of Nupe , the public sector workers ' union , said at the start of four days of debate on the review reports . |
11 | Now more than ever it is important to be a force for change . |
12 | But the seminal event was Sir Peter 's decison to publish A Force for Change , the survey carried out last year by the Wolff Olins consultancy . |
13 | The publication of A Force for Change was crucial because it represented an important internal victory for the reformers , and established glasnost as the principle by which the Met was to be put right . |
14 | THE main public response to A Force for Change is the Plus Programme , a continuing series of measures drawn up by Deputy Assistant Commissioner Charles Pollard and Commander Alec Marnoch . |
15 | They seemed a force for change . |
16 | They will be both a force for stability and a force for change in the next Parliament whatever role we play . ’ |
17 | He writes songs that bare their roots with an unsubtle pride , and in choosing to cover both a Ron Wood song and a very Clash-version influenced ‘ Pressure Drop ’ , he has outlined his mission very clearly ; namely , to be the sort of rock musician who thinks that Keith Richards is a force for change in the world and that Los Angeles poodle metal is bollocks . |
18 | Concerned now that there is a pressing need to draw Eastern Europe and the Third World into the debate , she is nevertheless convinced of the continued centrality if the market economy as a force for change : ‘ The market will go on having a fantastically important role , pushing things forward . ’ |
19 | I am not about to dismiss the poor as part of a force for change , but there is a great deal more to it than organizing the poor to help themselves . |
20 | That conference injected a force for change into the thinking of South Africa , at a moment when the country was ripe for it . |
21 | Or did he see it as a force for change ? |
22 | The Tories argue that only a vote for the SNP is a vote for change . |
23 | Second , the book is not primarily a programme for change . |
24 | It is important to emphasise that the impact of the Teacher Placement Service is far greater than the sum of teachers taking placement , as evaluative returns and case study evidence consistently point to the experience as a stimulus for change and the development of partnership activities . |
25 | The concerns of what might be called the research and development agencies in the NHS , such as the Nuffield Foundation and the Kings Fund , also provided a stimulus for change . |
26 | We will also develop a Technology Audit which will provide small firms with a plan for change . |
27 | It is a plan for change and movement . |
28 | It was a manifesto for change , and although it was given greater publicity by the Tories and the local press than by the Labour Party , it was with this manifesto that Labour increased its majority in Haringey . |
29 | Arguably , the growth of headhunting in Britain stemmed from the success of the sales and publicity efforts of individual headhunters themselves , operating in newly responsive market conditions where a need for change had already been recognised . |
30 | Reich thought that there were logical consequences of psychoanalytic findings , which led to a need for change in the moral teachings and practice of educators in schools , the home , and in churches . |