词汇 | example_english_safeguard |
释义 | Examples of safeguardThese 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. Thus, before 1967, there were effective safeguards to the maintenance of good quality cocoa. The data gathered in this study indicate that these additional safeguards were developed through the operation of institutional learning arrangements. Our profession is art, they claimed, and managed to get it subsidized and safeguarded as a valuable national legacy. Two factors that are likely to influence such trade-offs are the selection pressure from parasites and the reproductive value of safeguarding future survival. An incomplete method uses clever intuitive heuristics for searching but has no safeguards if the search gets stuck in a local minimum. Hence, there can be no satisfactory solution to safeguarding this muscoid component of dung degradation. Above all, the entire patriarchal structure had an interest in safeguarding women's dowries and ensuring that the system was working smoothly. Food producers should consider stringent safeguards to prevent contamination of food-processing equipment during renovation or construction activities, including enhanced in-plant environmental monitoring. Mathematicians should be more receptive to theoretical material but with safeguards and a strict honesty. Similarly, assumptions about society's responsibility for safeguarding the best interests of children can be questioned. Such studies can be used to identify weaknesses in the system, as well as opportunities for enhancing system safeguards. However, restraints or punishment of scientists who contribute to our growing body of knowledge, in compliance with applicable regulatory safeguards, may constitute overreaching government action. The liberties of individuals were also ostensibly safeguarded by the sworn obligation placed on many civic and company elites to rule impartially. They have a similar obligation to make their findings known within a forum-most typically, a peer-reviewed publication-that safeguards integrity and excellence. In addition, smaller communities had tended to provide safeguards against the outright sale of votes or the intimidation of voters. Being at home safeguards patients' entire life situation and increases quality of life. What cannot be gainsaid is that nature safeguards certain principles that must be respected no matter in which discipline they come to fruition. In 1917, legislators from small counties safeguarded the system by changing it from a party rule to state law. Despite a long history of labour out-migration, agrarian conservatism had been safeguarded by the persistence of a tribal identity. Ozone diplomacy: new directions in safeguarding the planet. Correspondingly, safeguarding pastoral rights in the lowlands will help to protect the fragile environment against the ecological degradation caused by huge, mechanised agricultural schemes. In the first case, where quality is to be checked and safeguarded, it is a synchronic and static entity. In such cases, any talk about safeguarding their rights is usually beside the point. What safeguards can be put in place to ensure that damages to persons will not be minimized for the sake of "a greater good"? The type of technique described here, while it is not psychotherapy, would also need to incorporate safeguards against facilitators suggesting memories to participants. In the absence of such safeguards, advocates were determined to preserve the consumers' position as (relatively) safe but captured subjects of a pro-producer, paternalistic state. One might even conclude that safeguards are not very useful when it comes to compiling "actual" programs. Their political power ensured that their interest in private, individual property was created and safeguarded by state actors. Risk-averse decision makers might require additional safeguards against factionalism. To preserve life, then, requires knowing what "life" means for each individual and safeguarding the expression of that experience. There also existed a certain degree of co-operation between the urban government and the burghers in view of safeguarding urban stability. What worries software specialists and those who market it is how their rights can be preserved and legally safeguarded. To them, an agency safeguarding wage-and-hour provisions must reduce the inherent power differential between an employer and an employee to be effective. Our experience suggests that the policy provides some of the ethical safeguards that are needed in these cases. The scientific community and regulatory agencies have developed sophisticated safeguards and guidance to avoid conscious or unconscious biases. An agent carrying or exchanging such information needs to be safeguarded against both passive and active attacks, which are aimed at compromising a user's privacy. We implemented the following safeguards to ensure that the treatment procedures were conducted as planned. There are good reasons for continuing experimentation with genetic improvements of plants and animals, provided that there are adequate safeguards. First, the interviews used safeguards against social desirability bias, including interviewing family members individually, asking carefully balanced questions, and inviting interviewees to voice dissatisfactions. Nevertheless, any system of protections that safeguards exclusively the integrity of private transactions may protect individual trees, but risks forgetting about the forest. Procedural rules employed as safeguards against capture by special interests can work against rapid adaptation to changing ecological conditions. The use of postcode district to geocode the data safeguarded patient confidentiality. Policy-makers need to consider the repercussions of this new technology and provide safeguards and appropriate legislation that covers their operation. Advocacy is principally concerned with promoting and safeguarding the well-being and interests of patients. In a democracy, of course, the judiciary plays an important role in both maintaining the rule of law and safeguarding the rights of the citizens. Naturally, safeguards, in the form of controls, must be in place in any experimental study. They thought that labor unions could join legitimate employers in safeguarding competition by practicing regulatory unionism. Furthermore, until relatively recently there were few, if any, legal safeguards against the involuntary hospitalization of those deemed to have mental disorders. The record suggests that more rigorous safeguards were not introduced and that more rigorous ethical standards were not applied. Complaints about the costliness of slack in the road agencies started to replace arguments about safeguarding infrastructure quality through public planning and control. The ®rst section reviews the biological principles and regulatory concepts that determine the need and subsequent design of containment facilities, safeguards and operating procedures. Policy makers need to consider the repercussions of this new technology and provide safeguards and appropriate legislation that covers their operation. With the dissolution of the two-tier system of produce inspection, these safeguards were removed. His honor should be safeguarded to insure his survival in an atmosphere of freedom and responsibility. Still, we adopt safeguards because they are designed to avoid exponential behavior in some specific situations, which do not show up in the above examples. Learning mechanisms can also include rules and incentives that aim to promote the implementation of enhanced safeguards. Regarding the complaint of the industrialists, a technical arrangement safeguarded their supply of raw acid water. Is it intended that such an individual remains under the framework of safeguards over the same period of time? Such proposals are tempting, particularly in a regulatory framework where rigorous standards and safeguards are demanded. In this repertoire, supporting culture means safeguarding values and traditions that are seen as being elementary to the nation's future. Thus determining just how the instrument safeguards experimental results involves the definition of that instrument. The safeguards we propose are not new; they are essentially the traditional practices associated with conjectures. Drugs are subject to strict safeguards and rigid test protocols before they are allowed to be used. Especially among the rural poor, tradition is the only way of safeguarding their culture. Illiteracy is a sensitive area, in which the person's dignity needs to be safeguarded, and this requires a modicum of privacy. Savings and investments offer a better prospect but are frequently safeguarded to contribute to income. A further set of writers argued that hereditary monarchy was tolerable as long as there were safeguards against arbitrary power. Farsightedness refers to the idea that actors anticipate future (opportunistic) behaviour and create safeguards to protect themselves. However, there are several safeguards in place. At the same time, the lack of an alternative, resulting from the imposition of ideological safeguards on the official art world, offered them little hope of remedying the situation. She warns that restraints or punishments of scientists who contribute to our growing body of knowledge, in compliance with applicable regulatory safeguards, may constitute overreaching government action. A number of other issues also commanded attention : the backlog of cases created by an insufficient number of judges, the lack of safeguards against collusive cases. The marketplace itself may provide safeguards and guarantees against fraud and breaches of the protocol, as well as impose sanctions on those who have deviated from the prescribed rules. The agreements contain safeguards that protect the interests of both senders and receivers, and was agreed with concerns about defection in the back of the negotiators' minds. In contrast, a trust is an intended ar rangement where a trustee manages, invests, or safeguards the tr ust assets for the benefit of certain beneficiaries. Ensuring or safeguarding legislative pre-eminence can be accomplished at least as well (probably better) by adopting the ordinar y- or plain-meaning approach to statutor y interpretation. When using unsafe interval arithmetic, proper safeguards must be taken at places (such as inner operations and intersections) where intervals might become (spuriously) empty owing to accumulation of round-off errors. Physician-researchers have a responsibility not only to adhere to standards for research, but also to lend their expertise to the development of safeguards and oversight mechanisms, both nationally and internationally. The relevant transaction costs include both the ex-ante costs of drafting, negotiating, and safeguarding an agreement, and the ex-post costs associated with contractual breakdowns and rent seeking behavior. However, the new equilibrium is only stable to the extent that a stable majority feels the fulfilment of their preferences is sufficiently safeguarded in this new equilibrium. He cautioned, however that this inertia is due, in no small part, to two rules of law which are themselves safeguards of the liberty of individuals. Virtual pharmacies boast easy access, privacy safeguards. As was discussed in the previous section, it is not reasonable to assume an idealized policymaking environment and so mixed instruments that combine incentives and administrative safeguards are most relevant. Transaction cost economics argues that transactions will be organized so as to economize on bounded rationality while simultaneously safeguarding the transactions against the hazards of opportunism. Other experts conclude that three actions, taken together, are sufficient safeguards for lack of bias and adequate accuracy. However, special safeguards must be in place to protect the rights of subjects involved in genetic research. The ruthless punishment meted out to senior officials who fell from favour reflected the general lack of legal safeguards for life and property. However, we have enough faith to allow them to police those very safeguards which mistrust has impelled us to impose. A number of safeguards were said to be in force, the first being that all applications had to be made in writing. In effect, the demographic momentum safeguarded the continuation of the cultural-historical tradition until at least the late 1980s. The rejection of thou also safeguarded against offending people. Does the sustainability objective imply some particular ways of, or requirements for, safeguarding and using information? In a corporate community, true freedom of worship is best safeguarded by corporate compulsion. There should be anonymous reporting systems or a designated committee to handle such information and establish appropriate safeguards against repercussions. One of these most certainly is the role of the state in protecting life and safeguarding the vulnerable from harm. Are they the safeguards our profession and patients will need as we continue to pursue and implement this technology? By substituting health professionals from other clinical areas to cover the hospital's essential services, patient welfare may be minimally safeguarded, at least temporarily. What distinguishes the food production through agroforestry systems from that through intensive annual cropping is its inherent safeguards to ensure sustainable use of environmental resources. All legitimate interests of minority communities should be safeguarded. 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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