Arguably, Limerick has the most expansive joined-up area of disadvantage that exists in the country. |
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It wasn't like now when people who can do joined-up writing want to become chefs. |
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If ever politicians should learn and adopt a process of joined-up thinking they'll get even more interesting. |
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For a change it seems that some joined-up thinking is going on, at least in the Treasury. |
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The building control and planning departments should work together and show a bit of joined-up thinking. |
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Real joined-up thinking would mean a concerted attempt to take the heat off the south-east. |
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We have been successful because we have worked towards common goals in a joined-up way. |
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It is about joined-up thinking and processes and not just piece-meal actions and decisions. |
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Dublin also needs, as we have said before, joined-up thinking in relation to transport. |
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He said it was not just a lack of joined-up thinking on business issues that had concerned the Chamber. |
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Ireland is younger, more sallow, better educated, more vibrant and more in need of joined-up thinking than ever before. |
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This is the sort of lack of joined-up thinking that's getting in the way of what disabled people need. |
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But such extra burdens hardly help business, which now needs to lobby for joined-up tax reform. |
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Closing the pool hardly seems like an example of joined-up thinking. |
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There needs to be more joined-up thinking between all the health trusts. |
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This is not joined-up thinking, and remember who is paying for all this. |
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When it comes to joined-up government, ministers can talk the talk, but can they walk the walk? |
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Fact and fiction are welded so that the genre of the biopic has no meaning in the canons of joined-up cinema. |
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In short, why aren't children getting more joined-up teaching? |
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