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词汇 example_english_conscription
释义

Examples of conscription


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.
But such organized resistance was rare, and once called up, few soldiers dodged conscription and even fewer deserted.
These have included publications exploring popular medicine, the introduction of compulsory education for children, and, most dramatically of all, the imposition of military conscription.
They paid taxes, obeyed administrators and contributed to military conscription, but strived to maintain cultural hegemony over what they considered as their sacred space.
One possibility is simply under-registration of males because they were escaping military conscription.
The repeated and prolonged military campaigns would not have been possible without military conscription: its impact on the agricultural economy was far from negligible.
This approach would invoke the kind of logic that undergirds national conscription in times of military need.
One of the first two major inquiries focused on the issue of labour and conscription.
The state's implementation of conscription was obstructed by limited bureaucratic and coercive capacity, and by the continued political autonomy of the regions.
The original levee en masse was a system of conscription enforced from above, but it was presented as a spontaneous expression of popular will.
Accordingly, the government initiated a series of military reforms, including the overhauling of the conscription regulations in 1886.
The struggle over conscription also reveals a conflict over the definition and defence of public and private spheres.
This may be because the military conscription of younger males affected their wives while the older females whose husbands stayed at home remained relatively unaffected.
The contract was therefore restricted to individuals from the same conscription class, and the same locality.
I have considered two reasons why the public would not be willing to accept cadaveric organ conscription and why it would not be ethically justifiable.
Thirty-one percent of the respondents said they would likely accept a policy of cadaveric organ conscription; 19% definitely would and 12% probably would.
Therefore, any attempt to implement a trial of conscription would probably not succeed at this time.
Two factors that led to this simplification were the conscription law and the increase in the significance of peddling.
The state's ability, or even willingness, to control the implementation of conscription remained very limited, and a considerable gulf developed between theory and practise.
Just as conscription made soldiering the norm for generations of young men, so war work brought women into the labour force as never before.
The government progressively tightened up the conscription process to stamp out such fraud.
It is during this time that the population's resistance to forced conscription intensified.
In the event that conscription is revived, conscientious objectors or those who prefer noncombat duties on grounds of religious principle could be engaged.
Europeans before 1914, especially on the continent, were closely tied to the army through education, popular sentiment, and, most importantly, conscription.
The authorities estimated that these new measures would minimize the openings for spurious registrations intended only to escape military conscription.
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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