词汇 | example_english_police |
释义 | Examples of policeThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Industrialization, poverty, and unemployment gave rise to property, as opposed to people-related, offences on a scale that transcended ethnic boundaries and necessitated new policing methods. By involving local people in the management of protected areas, the authorities could offer employment to local communities, while reducing the cost of policing. Participants heard how difficult it is to stop a determined thief, which may have curtailed support for policing and obviation. The same considerations should, presumably, underpin reviews of policing in democratic societies. Ghanaian policing has much in common with policing elsewhere. However, the issue of policing remains highly contentious. No longer was the state responsible for policing the health of society: everyone was to be his or her own policeman. Adapting postwar social polices to new social risks. Given its expected role in deterring crime, punishment was a significant aspect of policing in this period. In addition to the previous issue, problems of rigidity in policing the system become relevant. Criticisms focused upon the arboretum's appearance, policing problems, access and funding. Rather, reform emerged out of and re-ected the various forms of policing that had evolved at the local level over the previous 100 years. With the appointment of his new gardes, the burden of policing the craft would be transferred to the state. Within this discursive framework there are both an explicit denial that policing changes have occurred, and a call for an entirely "new" form of policing. The history of modern policing itself indicates longstanding concern with excessive, sometimes brutal, control over citizens by law enforcement agents. While a notion of policing might be regarded as pejorative, this is not the intention. Thus, communities policed and judged themselves : the need to prevent crime and resolve disputes was one of the ties binding communities together. Young soldiers are often required to perform tasks (fighting or policing) with critical educational ramifications. Regardless of this, the police's secondary status must be reinforced by their lack of resources. The analysis of the third myth shows that the police's belief in their persuasive power is also mistaken. In the state's hands, it is argued, policing activities can be required to be accountable, consistent and humane. The issue of policing is but one measure of democratic progress, but it is not an insignificant one. Crime, political transition and changing forms of policing control. The takeover of policing and security functions by vigilante groups clearly indicates state deficits, despite its political and anti-federal implications. Data on crimes and population refer to areas policed by county constabularies; prosecutions in boroughs were minimal. Here, the activity of policing men and women in to the goods and services economy is its own righteous service. Such 'technologies of the self ' embody the principles of random breath testing, in policing strategies of unpredictable and comprehensive state surveillance. The chasm between nature and culture yawned wider than ever before, and attempts to bridge that chasm were policed more severely than ever before. Nonetheless, teachers spend a good part of the day policing their bodies and actions. The implementation of these plans has however never been policed. Now we resort to policing from outside agencies only to punish a few egregious violations. As a result of their efforts many of the anti-environmental administrators were removed, many budget cuts restored, and many environmental polices were even stronger. Moreover, social work practices were influential in shaping the rhetoric and method of women's policing work. Towns were better garrisoned, policed, and reported upon, so urban rebels were more likely to show up in arrest and prison records and newspaper accounts. The other cycle is a partisan-type cycle in which different preferences for certain economic polices across political parties cause certain economic fluctuations. The more opposition voter's in your social networks, the more you support liberal polices, holding all else constant. On each of the occasions when statutory reforms have been operationalised in the last four decades, they have been overridden by other policing priorities. How equitable are child support polices and have current reforms acted to reduce or enhance inequities between children? The boundary line between disability and unemployment does not have to be policed by making a medical determination. The examination of policing institutions and security reform can take many shapes or routes, emphasising public security, judicial matters or human rights concerns for instance. If certain policy regimes are characterized by indeterminacy, and others are not, then one might advocate one of the latter polices. The successful formal reform of policing did not lead to fully accountable, responsive citizen-oriented public security. Cooperating employers could engage unions to help in policing employers' agreements and to establish uniform conditions within an industry. Elsewhere, however, he elaborates, above all in a draft note for his memoirs that discusses the problems of policing and suppressing rumours. Even if it has not, policing the townships has grown more incompetent by the day. In contrast, policing seemingly operated on diametrically opposite principles, at least from the 1930s onwards. If diverting resources to land improvement and productivity increasing practices is profitable for privately held land, then land-titling polices may help mitigate these negative externalities. The alternative - a conspiracy of community internal oppression/criminal disorganisation, drugs and the culture of the grass - is much more problematic in policing terms. The ' preventive ' aspect of policing involved the rescue of the ' deprived ' before they became enmeshed in criminal activity. A second community policing initiative died with the change of government in 1999. If freedom were to advance, both the state and the public sphere had to be o policed by the right people. Both institutions were also to perform policing functions as part of their mandate to maintain security and order in the provinces. We have argued above that the configuration of discourse patterns in focusgroup discussions of policing reflects a subset of nationalist thinking. Once again then, the concept of policing change - this time an acknowledged and observable change - is dismissed and rejected. One could say that women are policing the definition of the prestige variant. Restorative justice and communitybased alternatives to policing also feature quite strongly in some transitional spaces in terms of redefining power relations and administering effective process. As a result it became increasingly insular and insistent on policing doctrinal developments, excluding outsiders from constructive participation. Fixed pitches are provided (and sponsored by a brewery) and performers' sets are regulated; ad hoc performance outside these times and places is strictly policed. As a result, they invested a great deal of energy in progressive reforms such as policing leisure activities and managing public health. Overall this collection provides a formidable resource for students and teachers of nineteenth-century crime, policing, poverty and social policy. Growing disapproval of children's work along with its patchily policed prohibition probably means undercounting was not uniform over time and across sectors. Likewise, those who promoted the community policing initiative did not connect with outside sources of expertise or funding, an oversight that left the project fragile until its demise. Acknowledgement of the private domain is sacrosanct in other areas of legislation, in fact heavily policed, but not addressed in discussions of the acoustic environment beyond amplitude limitations. The latter could be due, for example, to increasing costs of enforcing and policing regulatory regimes related to the biodiversity-orientated use of natural resources, as the experience with poaching demonstrates. Policy makers would benefit from more impartial research into cases where the economic, political, social and historical factors have created and sustained effective water polices, regardless of ownership. Meanwhile, media descriptions of 'the music industry' do little to encourage public understanding of those industries involved in producing and policing access to popular music and the conflicts within them. There is a continued belief in the ability of the market to provide; and so long as right polices are followed, the future is, potentially, very promising. With a mobile and differentiated notion of genre, the analysis need never devolve into an evaluation of the policing function of the concept, or worse, into an arid taxonomic exercise. The flow of cultural meaning that emerges out of the circulation of musical texts is of course policed - inter alia - by a small band of enormous trans-national corporations. The family became a new moral arena created and sustained by medicine and today policed by a range of state of cials, including health visitors, school teachers and social workers. Her rst thought makes explicit the policing of the home by servants; her second betrays the anxiety of being so policed, an anxiety shared by her friends and family. The streets, traditionally the domain of the poor, were more strictly policed and neighbourhood festivities banned while efforts were made to regulate the activities of street entertainers. With an education paid for out of public funds, and perhaps an apprenticeship arranged and policed by the vestry, poor children were clearly directed towards the path of virtuous citizenship. In the segregation era, this meant operating within the political boundaries of a world that wanted to be modern while policing racial boundaries even where food and health were concerned. Policies are proposed to combat each of the three causes: by means of regular safety checks; better training of workers; and better policing to track down and punish arsonists. However, local politics, where women are more active in terms of resource and service allocation has little impact upon national politics in which budgets and welfare polices are set. Examples of tangible goods are not only material assets - such as public services, communication infrastructure and financial aid or credit - but also particular polices or working institutions. Except for such rare cases as a state of total war, the question is not whether, but to what extent a certain policy is the by-product of other polices. The cultural underworlds and the way in which they were regulated and policed is a theme pursued by a number of historians of modern cities in 2007. There is no guarantee that these agreements will be properly policed. From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English Let me explain one of the problems we have in providing the policing capacity which is needed. From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English We must see the evidence of change, particularly in the vital areas of justice and policing and the fight against organised crime and corruption. From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English Before considering precisely what" priority" means, let us examine who determines it, who polices it and who benefits from it. In policing these activities the courts were particularly vigilant. However, there are serious difficulties in the way of" policing" such an undertaking by the plaintiff. Little attention was paid to policing during this period. We have spent too long policing the boundaries of the discipline, and a revised discussion of relativism is welcome. In the directly occupied northern zone maintaining sovereignty in policing matters took on a different and much more negative form. A society that has certain regulations, laws, and policing functions produces a consequential set of attitudes and wrongdoings. As before, the problem was seen as one of policing.! Employers appear to have been slowly adjusting their remuneration polices to reflect changes in labour demand. Each district is policed by a field officer responsible to an area supervisor. A second section then analyses the corresponding drift towards a more repressive style of policing in this country. In the security area - military, intelligence, and policing - civilianisation was largely achieved. Furthermore, political integration and civilianisation of policing proceeded more successfully than the development of crime control capabilities. What these ironies reveal is that battles over border policing must of necessity be battles over the appearance of control rather than over real control. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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