Example sentences of "new [adj] movements " in BNC.

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1 The scandals have brought out a rash of new political movements , all of which want Tokyo 's dominance curbed .
2 Like many titles embraced by new reforming movements , it was at first thought rather vulgar .
3 The new popular movements of revolt , anarchism and socialism , were not only as anticlerical as any enlightened despot , they were often antireligious as well .
4 This had been made clear by the development of nuclear weapons , by new popular movements and ideologies , and by scientific and technical developments .
5 Haynes may have been apolitical , but his very naivete , and openness to the cultural currents of the time , underlined the difference between the Labour Government 's radicalism and the new popular movements .
6 The new social movements represent a very positive force , they unite people in different occupations to confront a problem and in so doing , they raise consciousness .
7 The new social movements represent a multi-class force for change , but so far , have in general been limited in their achievements .
8 The Atlanticist compromise was challenged from the Left by the new social movements which emerged in the aftermath of Vietnam .
9 The new social movements of the 1970s and the 1980s emerged outside the formal party structures precisely because of the way in which the parties of the Left , which should have articulated new emancipatory concerns , were caught up in the compromises of the 1940s .
10 It has survived from the early 1930s because of its craggy independence , its non-institutional base , its ability to adapt to new social movements thrown up by the working-class and oppressed groups and , most important , its radical philosophy and perspective .
11 The ‘ council movement ’ was especially vigorous , and was widely debated among socialists in the years immediately preceding and following the First World War ( Renner , 1921 ; Pribicevic , 1959 ) ; and more recently it again aroused growing interest as a result of the experience of workers ' self-management in Yugoslavia , some tentative steps in that direction in other East European countries during the 1970s , and the formulation of ideas about ‘ participatory democracy ’ that arose from the new social movements of the late 1960s .
12 Since the 1960s , when a number of new social movements — among them the student movement , various national and ethnic movements , and the women 's movement — became extremely active in political life , a great deal more attention has been given by sociologists to such forms of political action , which may be seen not only as constituting a basis or context for the development of more highly organized political activities , but also as political forces in their own right , existing alongside and sometimes in conflict with , established parties and pressure groups .
13 These circumstances are themselves historically changing , and in response to the changes new social movements and parties may emerge within the established political system , as did the socialist parties , and later the communist and fascist parties , in Europe .
14 In 1982 , Rudi Fuchs came up with an accurate analysis of the new avant-garde movements in painting , and in 1987 Manfred Schneckenburger drew our attention to what I would call sociological considerations : art and culture , art and design , and so on .
15 The middle classes led a host of new national movements — the large ones of the Germans , poles , Magyars , Italians , but also now including a host of smaller peoples : Irish , Schleswig Danes , Czechs , Slovaks , Croats and Ruthenians .
16 For their part , trade unions showed little or no interest in the new community-based movements that emerged from the late 1960s , and saw little to interest them in the educational work that developed around community struggles .
17 After 1968 , no new artistic movements were permitted , and groups of artists or intellectuals meeting in cafes became the subject of suspicion .
18 Between 1957 and 1960 Sartre 's thoughts were dominated , on the one hand , by Soviet intransigence and seeming inability to destalinise , and on the other , by the burgeoning of new revolutionary movements in the Third World .
19 Unless the working classes were caught up in the new sectarian movements of Protestantism ( which were themselves a reaction and response to modernity ) , they were liable to slip into unbelief .
20 Fresh questions have arisen in response to such phenomena as the emergence of the new religious movements or ‘ cults ’ and the rise of new forms of orthodox religions of the right , such as the Ayatollah 's Iran , or Jerry Falwell 's Moral Majority in the United States .
21 Areas of study reflect both the old and the new concerns : they range from head-counting to Grand Theory ; they cover religious organisations and their power structures ; they examine processes such as conversion , apostasy , institutionalisation , bureaucratisation , the growth of charisma and its rationalisation ; typological distinctions are drawn ( such as those between church , denomination and sect ) ; the relationship between religion and other areas of society ( the family , education , economy and , especially , politics ) is examined from a number of angles at a number of levels ; and there is also developing an increasing number of specialist ‘ sub-disciplines ’ — such as the sociologies of Catholicism , secularism , the ministry , gender and religion , and new religious movements .
22 We shall need to consider this matter later when we examine the new religious movements , but decree no. 13 forbade the foundation of further new congregations .
23 Two courses are chosen from : Philosophical and Apologetic Theology ; Dogmatic Theology ; Theology and Imagination ; Theology , Ideology , and Culture ; Celtic Christianity ; Ecology and Christian Theology ; Ecumenical Theology ; Feminist Theology ; Theology in the Post-Modern World ; Marxism and Religion ; Kingship and Religion ; New Religious Movements ; and Religions and their Political Expressions .
24 Mountbatten 's personal view was that the new nationalist movements should be appeased rather than suppressed and that the old colonial powers should settle for the best deal that they could get , pledging independence in the near future and thus , he hoped , preserving the greater part of their economic advantages .
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