At every turn in the conjuncture of events German capitalism is thrown up against those problems which it had attempted to solve by means of war. |
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Superficially, the rationale of the style would seem to be its conjuncture of sensitivity and showmanship. |
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African environmental history is thus a complex story of conjuncture, adaptation, and cultural and environmental flux. |
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What kind of racialized, gendered selves get produced at the conjuncture of the transnational and the neo-colonial? |
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The present international and national political conjuncture has a great deal to do with this. |
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No one knows the future, of course, but every historian knows that the current conjuncture will change. |
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I believe that the conjuncture has to be perfect to make certain decisions. |
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It is rather penurious reasoning too, knowing what we know about the geo-strategic priorities of the United States at this conjuncture. |
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Yet, how credible is such an option in the current conjuncture where intense capitalist competition continues and the power of international capital in fact has not declined? |
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It became possible to influence on the calendar in function of the economic conjuncture. |
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And yet, there is no upward trend in the economic conjuncture. |
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Now that same independent central bank is grappling with an ugly conjuncture of rising inflation and falling growth. |
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We are aware that this is a critical conjuncture for peace and security in Afghanistan. |
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But only an impressionist would believe that the current conjuncture will continue indefinitely. |
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This privatization of their existence is an extension of the overall processes of privatization central to the current conjuncture. |
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This conjuncture of key personal events is a crossroads, not a judgment. |
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But such a conjuncture of ways of life is not easily attained. |
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It was really a conjuncture of social, economic, generational, and cultural shifts that changed the very identity of the left over the last twenty-live years. |
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Rather, we are today in such a conjuncture that the entire capitalist world is experiencing a crisis, less due to challenges from below than internal weaknesses. |
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In this beginning of the second part of his presidential term, Mr. Alan Garcia faces a difficult domestic situation due to a number of factors only partly linked to the economic conjuncture. |
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Beyond the current conjuncture, this policy approach should ensure that Europe retains a core human and technological know-how serving the sustainability and competitiveness of current and future shipping operations. |
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Exploiting the current international conjuncture to label the situation as an example of terrorism amounts to an attempt to avoid resolving the conflict by muzzling the opposition. |
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There are also those who experience recurrent periods of unemployment or inactivity mixed with periods of low wage, oftentimes in conjuncture with insecure employment. |
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Mindful of this awareness, respective activities have been carried out under the COMCEC agenda, thus taking stock of the relevant international conjuncture. |
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The current conjuncture of stubborn or increasing unemployment in the face of modest growth is unlike anything the Western democracies have faced before and it is causing concern in capitals from Washington to Brussels. |
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Another delegate stated that support for industrial policy grew during times of economic crisis and that conjuncture could be an opportunity to articulate industrial policy that was compatible with competition policy. |
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The objective has now become to use the revised democratic development framework as a tool for identifying those rights that carry that strategic potential in a given country at a given conjuncture. |
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However, it was considered that the market conjuncture, being equal for all the operators in the market, should have had similar effects on all of them. |
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Much has been published and there is an impressive array of literature dealing with both the history of peace-building initiatives as well as the present conjuncture. |
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To take advantage of the possibilities that this conjuncture opened, elites in Latin America directed their countries ever more toward export economies. |
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Endsick, they called it, and at moments of planetary conjuncture, calendrical bad luck or mooncalf births, its sufferers would moan and puke, struck down by the side effects of revelations in which they had no faith. |
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Governments and economic actors should have a long term vision, even when the conjuncture is not favourable, and not seek immediate profit by all means. |
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Dexia Sofcah dedicated its first statistical conjuncture note to managing absenteeism in local authorities and to its impact as human and financial challenge. |
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The somewhat complex British development of distributism emerged as a conjuncture of ideas of Penty, Hilaire Belloc and the Chestertons, Cecil and Gilbert. |
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