Example sentences of "for social [noun sg] and " in BNC.

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1 Their experience can be used as part of the learning progress for Social Work and joint examination of the subject can be fruitful .
2 But , in his distinctly supply-side programme of aiding the wealthy and ‘ achievers ’ in general with tax cuts , his relative disregard for social inequality and the mounting costs for the unemployed and other socially disadvantaged groups , and his hedonistic endorsement of private gain , Lawson 's financial methods became the pivot of government policy .
3 ‘ Association ’ — the free and conscious formation of voluntary democratic societies for social defence and improvement — was the magic formula of the liberal era ; through it even the labour movements which were to abandon liberalism were to develop .
4 Under capitalism the market and the desire to accumulate wealth appear to be a sufficient basis for social interaction and for regulating communal life ; things and impersonal economic mechanisms have replaced people 's commitment to each other while ‘ the ancient conception in which man always appears ( in however narrowly national , religious or political a definition ) as the aim of production , seems very much more exalted that the modern world in which production is the aim of man and wealth the aim of production ’ [ p. 84 ] .
5 They offer to their old people many opportunities for social interaction and for emotionally rewarding experiences .
6 Even If you are not religious , it is a welcome chance for social contact and the exchange of a few pleasantries with him .
7 It was the major enabler for social mobility and advancement .
8 All this , however , in the search for social esteem and personal uniqueness .
9 Hilary Land examines women 's systematic loss of rights and claims for social protection and its effect on the family and children during the 1980s .
10 On Jan. 16 , Yeltsin reported to the Supreme Soviet that on his recent tour of the country to find out the effects of price liberalization he had found that local officials were not implementing government measures for social protection and that producers ' profit margins were too high .
11 Each group attempts to project its interests , its ‘ capital ’ , as the proper source for social reputation and status .
12 Through extensive interviews , it focuses on the lives of 15 British men and women , aged between 70 and 90 , who have dedicated half a century or longer to working for social change and justice .
13 Or , alternatively , in what way can the religious experience of conversion , both personal and in its ramifications for social change and conversion of community , shed light on the process of profound socio-political transformation ?
14 The major development during the inter-war period was the establishment of English studies as a bulwark against , rather than force for social change and cultural innovation .
15 Aware that society has been constructed by able-bodied people in ways which serve and perpetuate their own interests , these people have used our consequential marginalisation and dependence not as a starting-point for developing with us a struggle for social change and equal opportunities , but as a handy and convenient fact to justify the development of all the inappropriate disability services with which we are now so familiar .
16 New party groupings and alliances are being formed and new policies hammered out , influenced by internal pressures for social change and redistribution , by the impact of inflation and unemployment , and the urgent need to meet the demands of external agents , most notably the IMF and the international banking community .
17 The CAB service has its origins in the combined operation set up in 1938 by the Ministry of Health , the National Council for Social Service and the Family Welfare Association to provide advice and information in an emergency .
18 This solidarity took different forms in the two different kinds of society , but in each case Durkheim saw punishment as playing an important role in the creation and maintenance of the solidarity which was a necessary condition for social order and the continued existence of society .
19 It was originally founded as the Deaf Friends ' Club for the oral deaf who desired to have the opportunity of meeting together for social intercourse and mutual improvement .
20 The truth is that the party leadership , in contradiction to its own declarations , is ridding itself of the democratic wing of the party and is preparing for social revenge and for a party and state coup . "
21 Sandwiched between these trips to China she investigated child labour in Egypt in 1930 under the auspices of the International Association for Social Progress and the ILO .
22 Victorian eugenists and biometricians such as Francis Galton and Karl Pearson expressed concern about higher working-class fertility and its supposed consequences for social welfare and national average ability .
23 Col. Moussa Diabate , Minister Delegate for Internal Security , took on additional responsibility as Secretary of State for Social Welfare and Women 's Promotion , a post hitherto held by Bocoum Mariama Suzane Maiga .
24 The two sets of pressures on the state — to meet demands for social welfare and other expenditure tied up with the legitimacy of the political system , and to provide the conditions for capitalist accumulation — were seen as leading to a growing ‘ fiscal crisis of the state ’ ( O'Connor 1973 ) .
25 His account of ideology on the other hand is much more rewarding , locating it as he does in the presuppositions necessary for social life and avoiding the philosophical consequences of attempting to privilege one perspective .
26 As a movement for social organization and mobilization , it threatened Israel 's long-term hold on the territories more than isolated attacks by guerrilla cells .
27 PMC works , according to its brochure , ‘ for those who fight for democratic empowerment , for environmental values , for social justice and economic fairness , for people of color , for women , for all groups historically disenfranchised . ’
28 Identification among the members of a crowd , or group , leads to demands for all to be equal ; given the numbers involved , it is not possible for particular individuals to be the favourite , so a reaction-formation grows up , expressed as a group demand for social justice and equality .
29 The women 's organizations are now confident that a unified representative body will be formed and that as a consequence , both their work to incorporate more women into the movement for social justice and a popular democratic government and their work in favour of women 's rights will be greatly strengthened .
30 People today are more outspoken , more assertive in their demands for social justice and more aggressive in the fight for social rights .
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