Given the prevalence of domestic violence, women's refuges are essential facilities. |
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Improvement plans for Woodhall Road include two pedestrian refuges at the village end, warning signs and changes to kerbsides. |
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After checking us in, she gave us directions to local refuges like Red Sand Beach and the Venus Pool. |
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After checking us in, she gave us directions to local refuges like Red Sand Beach, Makahiku Falls, Waianapanapa State Park, and the Venus Pool. |
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She appealed to the government to raise the profile of refuges for victims of violence and helplines. |
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He said there are only five emergency hostels and refuges in Dublin providing a total of 50 units for families. |
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He did, however, oppose the amendment to halt the use of leghold traps on national wildlife refuges. |
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We believe it is obscene that refuges should be turned into killing fields. |
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Their many wild habitats include palm trees, tree holes, arboreal epiphytes, burrows, rock crevices, or other animal refuges. |
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The United States has 540 wildlife refuges encompassing nearly 100 million acres. |
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Women's refuges, local hospices and day centres are also members of the Scrapstore. |
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This acreage includes mountains, deserts, prairies, lakes, oceans, forests, rangelands, national parks, and wildlife refuges. |
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In addition to these, there are a host of wildlife refuges, marine parks, biological reserves and privately established preserves and ecolodges. |
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Raised medians at the centre of the carriageway could also serve as pedestrian refuges. |
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Over time, physical conditions in the East Anglian refuges have improved and accommodation is no longer squalid and over-crowded. |
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Using military surplus equipment like smoke grenades, searchlights, and small airplanes, the FWS herded the birds back into the refuges. |
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Trips to refuges like Montezuma or Jamaica Bay are revelatory, but ultimately, we're trespassers, traipsing callously through the beasts' lairs. |
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Soon, the flood of refuges overwhelms the establishment, and all of the foreigners flee the war-torn nation. |
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But it says a petition signed by the occupants of 11 properties near one of the proposed refuges, near Elliot Court, has been received. |
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Although we applaud the current conservation efforts to build refuges for the red squirrels, we think these may not be enough. |
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The refuges were mainly areas of lowland rainforest that survived when savanna became more widely distributed in colder and drier episodes. |
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The islands are nature reserves and provide refuges for such diverse wildlife as Cape Barren geese, sea lions, tammar wallabies and death adders. |
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The island refuges of some species are also under threat from imported mammals such as rats and hedgehogs. |
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Without these refuges, colourfully known as the palisades of Vogt, the transplanted stem cells could not survive. |
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They provide refuges for species, protect fisheries, provide security for indigenous peoples and conserve cultural sites. |
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Some, like the very rare South Georgia pipit, will probably spread to the main island from offshore refuges quickly. |
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During the excursion one comes across some goatherd refuges still containing old pillows and blankets. |
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The uncertainty has prompted a flight from production and into traditional refuges such as gold, property and even carpets. |
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At last, refuges and protection organisms for vulnerable children in Togo are now well equipped. |
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In fact, during the excursion, one comes across some refuges used by goatherds that still contain old pillows and blankets. |
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Other refuges have been battered by oil drilling, toxic spills and massive floods, and few have had the political or financial muscle to defend themselves. |
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In four different polls in 1938 between 71 percent and 85 percent of the public opposed the U.S. accepting more war refuges. |
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Most temporary refuges are in developing countries which cannot absorb large numbers of displaced persons. |
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It happened almost every night, the neighborhoods too poor to pay for the fire teams to quench the flames, one at a time the last refuges of squatters were being cleared out. |
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Mike Bryant, who manages the Alligator River and Pea Island wildlife refuges on the North Carolina coast, has a stack of tasks as tall as the white cedars he works in. |
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Water is stored the way nature stores it in regenerated wetlands, recharged aquifers, and along recovered flood plains that are also refuges for wildlife. |
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The danger, of course, is that, if we're not careful, golf clubs are going to end up as mere refuges for increasingly grey and increasingly wrinkly sections of society. |
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Women are flocking to refuges and violent partners are moving back into the family home following the outlawing of temporary barring orders, according to women's aid groups. |
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For many years Bendigo-based Julie Oberin was Chair of the Women's Services Network, the peak body for women's domestic violence services, including refuges. |
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Through our social centres, soup runs, hostels, refuges, detox centres, community cafes, day care and residential homes, we get through a lot of tea and coffee. |
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There is also a network of refuges, in every county except Carlow, some transitional accommodation in Waterford and some limited outreach and settlement support services. |
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Thus, women's refuges were among the first projects to have been realised. |
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In investigating domestic violence, it is tempting for academics to speak to only those more easily accessible women who are resident in refuges, rather than other victims. |
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There, roads are generally free of cycle lanes, red or green painted patches, pedestrian refuges, traffic islands, widened pavements for cycle use and silly speed limits. |
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After the retreat of the ice sheets since the last glacial maximum, northern Europe was subsequently reinvaded from several refuges in southern Europe. |
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On wildlife refuges in Arizona where Schwalbe studies the amphibian, bullfrogs have nearly eliminated the Mexican garter snake and the Chiricahua leopard frog. |
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A lot of expeditions built base camps and refuges over the years, so it was perfectly plausible to have something like that survive, in the middle of nowhere. |
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There must be individuals there who feel sick about Howard's cynical exploitation of the Australian peoples' ignorance about refuges and fears of invasion. |
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Defensive refuges are added. Each line of defence was controlled by the next one, from the inside to the outside. |
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But sports, and the power of inertia, are the last two refuges for the cable industry and its increasingly unwatched channels. |
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Bivouacking is only permitted beside some refuges, subject to checking in with the warden. |
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After the war, refuges who had resided in exile in neighboring English-speaking countries returned to their home country which was francophone. |
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One of the last populations of single-horned Asiatic rhinoceros lives in the park, which is also one of the last refuges of the Bengal tiger. |
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There, beaver ponds produce increased food for young fish and provide refuges for large adults heading upstream to spawn. |
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The park is one of the chief refuges in Australia for several species, among them the magpie goose, green pygmy-goose and Burdekin duck. |
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The park is one of Australia's chief refuges for several bird species, including the Burdekin duck and magpie goose. |
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Privileged, untreated locations throughout Brittany and the Loire, which have become refuges for certain birds, will soon see the first arrival of bees. |
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The airport, the world's fifth busiest, is one of the last refuges for dwindling populations of the Riverside Fairy Shrimp. |
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To provide a safety offset for the loss of the hard shoulder, emergency refuges have been added, providing emergency telephones and lighting, and CCTV monitoring. |
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The remaining Upper Guinea forest is restricted to a number of isolated patches that are refuges for the region's unique species, including the chimpanzee and pygmy hippopotamus. |
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Federally leased public land includes numerous national parks, wildlife refuges and other nature preserves. |
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The refuges, according to the commissioners, should be divided into two departments, one to accommodate neglected or undisciplined children and the other to house those convicted of a crime. |
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Unlike mountain refuges in Europe bothies in the UK aren't manned. |
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Mass murders have occurred in national parks, which are often convenient hideouts for illegal groups. Avoid all national parks, wildlife refuges, and big-city outskirts. |
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Because they usually occur near the margin of an ice sheet, nunataks were thought to be glacial refuges for vegetation and centres for subsequent reoccupation of the land. |
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Build observation hides around Lake Pape in southwest Latvia, one of the last refuges for European bison. |
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In contrast to Allin, Gary Barlow accepted an OBE publicly for his good works, despite privately playing his part in closing hospitals, schools, shelters, and women's refuges across the land. |
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Sometimes it was embarrassing to roll up on council estates, at women's refuges, probation hostels or queues of the homeless at midnight soup kitchens – but never mind the car, she could put anyone at their ease. |
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The consequences, however, have been seen in more rough sleeping, the closure of women's refuges and a host of other impacts on the most vulnerable. |
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Other groups scattered around Britain have launched hundreds of similar grassroots campaigns, from saving women's refuges to opposing youth club closures. |
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It referred to challenges such as limited resources, continuous inflow of refuges and the threat of terrorism, and called upon the international community to support Yemen in that regard. |
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In contrast, in Portugal there are no specific measures for integration of recognised refuges aside from the help provided for four months, of about 600 Euros per month. |
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Within Congo, there are over 300,000 refuges. |
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The OAS has adopted resolutions to protect asylum seekers, refuges, and stateless persons in the Americas and continues to work to stem the regional problem of refugees. |
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They prefer low-lying areas with great expanses of wet grassy meadows and an abundance of ponds and lakes that serve as refuges from foxes and other land predators. |
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Based on the findings, we urged Sri Lanka's government to protect key beaches as turtle refuges, which it did, backed by a national turtle conservation action plan. |
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This is known as the expulsion law, and under it violent men can be expelled and women can no longer be forced to flee with their children to women's refuges and other similar establishments. |
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Unaccompanied children arriving from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea were not regarded as refuges, for the Constitution provided that the inhabitants of that country were nationals of the Republic of Korea. |
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The three refuges are believed by Buddhists to be protective and a form of reverence. |
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Reciting the three refuges is considered in Buddhism not as a place to hide, rather a thought that purifies, uplifts and strengthens. |
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The refuges arrived physically and psychologically exhausted. |
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This provides refuges for juvenile salmon so they do not have to swim into large channels where they are subject to predation. |
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The Cretan mountains and gorges are refuges for the endangered lammergeier vulture. |
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Important resources include basking, feeding, and nesting sites as well as refuges from predators. |
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It is thought to have survived in several refuges during the last ice age in southern Europe, Northeast Turkey and the Caucasus. |
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These include wildlife refuges and nature reserves that shelter a wide range of ecosystems. |
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The Danube is one of the last refuges in Europe for the white-tailed eagle, and hosts 70 percent of the global population of Dalmatian Pelicans. |
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At mussel refuges, the risk to introduce pathogens is compounded by the need for host fishes for glochidia transformation. |
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It is the planet's largest rainforest and is home to millions of species, providing one of the world's last refuges for jaguars, harpy eagles, and pink dolphins among others. |
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In addition to First State National Historical Park, Delaware has several museums, wildlife refuges, parks, houses, lighthouses, and other historic places. |
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Such situations can serve as refuges for certain Pleistocene relicts, such as Townsend's pocket gopher, while at the same time creating barriers for biological dispersal. |
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In the midwestern United States, they are not uncommon during winter near reservoirs and wildlife refuges that provide foraging opportunities at waterfowl concentrations. |
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