The state's interest in effective crime-fighting should never vitiate the citizens' Bill of Rights. |
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France will soon be setting new and controversial standards in circumscribing citizens' rights. |
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It wants Switzerland to hand over the withholding tax it levies on EU citizens' Swiss bank accounts. |
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This would go a long way to reduce some of our citizens' obstinate dependence on the weekly collection of waste. |
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As a way of striking the difficult balance between liberty and security, sacrificing foreign citizens' liberties is undoubtedly tempting. |
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The citizens' insurance model favoured by the party congress is a two-sided coin. |
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The Bill of Rights spells out citizens' inherent liberties and limits the government's power to infringe those rights. |
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Later in the month, it will also launch a citizens' charter and formally announce its already operational online complaint management system. |
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These are the priorities raised by residents at community meetings and citizens' summits sponsored by the mayor. |
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Fascism is thus a command economy where massive centralized government is developed to regulate its citizens' lives. |
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The U.S. Constitution puts a premium on individual liberty and freedom from governmental interference in the citizens' daily affairs. |
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From members of our citizens' panel to readers of our newspaper,. the message is loud and clear. |
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Prompt response to all citizens' calls for assistance should be a priority. |
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How can you be proud of being an independent country if the government is unable to improve its citizens' welfare? |
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The citizens' responses to four questions in the World Values Survey questionnaire have been taken up for detailed analysis. |
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If you plan on making a citizens' arrest, be sure to have a partner on cover and zipcuffs. |
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In colonial America, policing relied on community consensus and citizens' service as constables and in sheriffs' posses. |
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He attacked the tendency for rights to outweigh citizens' sense of responsibility. |
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Those bad tempered personnel manning counters in the revenue offices will no longer be the bane of citizens' existence. |
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Democracy mobilizes the citizens' support for state-directed projects, and recruits their energy for state-declared problems. |
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Members of the missing Japanese citizens' families continue to simmer with anger after the three rounds of inconclusive talks. |
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He lists some useful suggestions for rectifying citizens' political impotency. |
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The Pakistani Advice Centre is the first port of call for many of these city residents, acting as a citizens' advice bureau. |
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Since then, citizens' rights to property, and freedom of speech and publication have been institutionalized and popularized. |
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Rubble and slush from potholes and mud dumped recklessly by the cable companies and various civic agencies have only added to citizens' woes. |
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Setting an age limit is a form of age discrimination and a flagrant violation of the citizens' constitutional right to work. |
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He said there was the issue of citizens' arrests and the possibility that the guard could end up being charged with assault by the police. |
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Most nightmarishly, some worried that governments could one day use brain implants to monitor and perhaps even control citizens' behavior. |
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Do you believe the United States should hold Mexico responsible for its citizens' illegal crossing of our borders? |
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Governments should not grant marriage licenses, or otherwise keep record of their citizens' private doings. |
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Under proportional representation, even with a tame alternative vote system, it would be worth citizens' while to go out and vote for a party closer to their views. |
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A slew of white citizens' groups sprang up to oppose desegregation. |
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The moment I realised something had to be done was when I went to buy a train ticket and the cashier asked me if I had my senior citizens' railcard. |
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Her instruments inspired the formation of the local senior citizens' gourd band, whose music testifies to the unbounded nature of autodidactic innovation. |
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This follows a landmark European Court ruling that governments must now pay for their citizens' medical treatment abroad if there is undue delay providing it at home. |
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The regime persists uninterruptedly not because of the citizens' conviction of its fairness neither by its moral qualities nor by the practicality of its procedures. |
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Though no broad citizens' movement has formed against computerized vote-counting, a nationwide backlash against unverifiable paperless voting has. |
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The importance of citizens' full cooperation cannot be overemphasized for the success of the project, which will create a beautiful capital city for future generations. |
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A way out of the current impasse lies less in a thorough overhaul of the Constitution than in a public awakening to the need to strengthen citizens' participation in politics. |
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What a pappyshow has been their so-called co-operation on fighting crime, created as a direct result of citizens' pressure and political opportunism! |
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As in America, the citizens' militia was an integral part of a patriot ideology that extolled the right of a free people to bear arms in defence of liberty. |
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Individual citizens' cases will continue to be dealt with even-handedly on the basis of the evidence in the case. |
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The projects will focus on such areas as human rights, democratisation and citizens' participation in decision-making on economic development. |
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The legal code was written in Sardinian and established a whole range of citizens' rights. |
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During the continent's struggle against colonial rule, nationalistic songs boosted citizens' morale. |
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Numerous subsequent Royal Charters over the centuries confirmed and extended the citizens' rights. |
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Chester McConnell, a local environmentalist, and the Tennessee Environmental Council then brought a citizens' suit under the Clean Water Act. |
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Democrats tend to be favorably inclined towards reform that involves more government control over health care financing and citizens' right of access to health care. |
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A second article in the same issue of the Star, which purportedly was written to defend citizens' access to guns, was a halfhearted attempt at best. |
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This visible gesture of solidarity from the Crown was intended to cut through the citizens' misgivings about being held financially responsible for pulling down houses. |
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Thus, the etymological clarification and reform of American English promised to improve citizens' manners and thereby preserve republican purity and social stability. |
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The Einwohnerwehr, active in Germany from 1919 to 1921 was a paramilitary citizens' militia consisting of hundreds of thousands of mostly former servicemen. |
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In the following centuries, the land was used for parks, senior citizens' homes, theatres, other public facilities, and waterways without much planning. |
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