Sentences with phrase «compounded by difficulties»

One of the biggest challenges facing charter schools is finding quality, affordable facilities — a challenge often compounded by difficulties in securing a loan or a lease.
The trauma can be compounded by the difficulty of escape, the sense of helplessness, and the implied threat to their future, and indirectly by its potential affect on their loved ones, and become too much to bear.

Not exact matches

All of this is further compounded by a dearth of blockchain - skilled talent, as well as the difficulty of incentivizing other projects, developers, and teams to build on top of your technology.
Our difficulty in speaking about cross-cultural principles of right and wrong is compounded by the fact that international organizations, from the United Nations to the World Court, are fragile and nearly helpless in many of the most critical areas of conflict.
The idea of «God in three persons» is difficult enough, without compounding the difficulty by calling one of them a «Ghost.»
This style renders the book difficult to assess, and the difficulty is compounded by the frequently offered advice to consult the author's other writings for a fuller discussion.
The difficulty of drawing a line between the «inner» and «outer» physical aspects of perception is compounded by the fact that a percipient event, at least among «higher» organisms, is both forwardly and backwardly oriented.
And before that a mother told me that she never talked about her experience feeding her baby for fear of judgment because she switched to formula just a few weeks in due to difficulties and postpartum depression compounded by needing to return to work.
«The risks to the delivery of the new carriers are compounded by more generic problems with defence acquisition — notably the MoD's continuing difficulties in balancing its budget.»
According to him the difficulties that political parties face in mobilizing and deploying officers to monitor electoral processes will be compounded by the implementation of the law.
That difficulty was compounded by a lack of coordination between human and machine.
«As I began to struggle with headaches, lethargy, memory loss and speech difficulties, I became more and more anxious, and more and more accepting of the thought that maybe I just wasn't very smart This thought process was compounded by the fact that the doctors I went to couldn't find anything seriously wrong with me.
With The Weinstein Company experiencing financial difficulties (which Nine compounded, failing to earn back even a quarter of its $ 80 million budget in domestic exhibitions), its home video arm Genius Products was purchased by Vivendi Entertainment last year.
This often gets compounded by a fragmentation in services, difficulties in engaging all relevant actors, weak collaboration among stakeholders, and simply poor knowledge management across institutional boundaries.
With an increasing share of teachers leaving the classroom, schools face the challenge of filling more vacancies — the difficulty of which is compounded by national trends of lower enrollment in teacher preparation programs.53
The difficulty of steering with inoperative power steering is compounded by the choice of steering ratios in assisted steering gears vs. fully manual.
Technical difficulties over here, compounded by the short weekend, meant I couldn't get advance word out to you in time.
They are difficult works to confront; a difficulty compounded by the mute and resistant glass cases which encase them.
What I think just about everybody underestimates is 1) the historical difficulty of «living off the land», and 2) the degree to which that is compounded by ecosystem disruption and «weather weirding.»
bobl's difficulties in finding the sensisitivity to GHGs would be further compounded by the fact that you shouldn't be looking at the net antho effect anyway - as that ignores the negative anthro forcings.
The difficulty in regulating nanomaterials is compounded by the fact that scientists and industry are divided over whether to consider them as «new chemicals» - which would place them under the purview of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), an EPA law that requires companies to report any new chemicals being worked on before they are allowed to enter the marketplace.
This difficulty is compounded by the fact that traditional laws and customs are transmitted orally from generation to generation, so evidence of these may be restricted or inadmissible under the hearsay rule.137 This is an issue that has been identified by the Australian Law Reform Commission in its Review of the Uniform Evidence Act 1995.138 The Commission proposes that the uniform Evidence Acts should be amended to provide an exception to the hearsay and opinion evidence rules for evidence relevant to Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander traditional laws and customs.139 The Commission also observed that there are strong arguments that the NTA should be amended as the relevant provision does not provide sufficient guidance on or certainty on the admissibility of evidence in native title proceedings.140 However, legislative amendment to the NTA falls outside the terms of reference of this review.
Identifying the signs of physical or emotional abuse is notoriously difficult, with numerous studies detailing rampant under - detection in the medical community — even among primary care physicians, who typically have more training and a deeper familiarity with patients.2 For birth registrars, the innate difficulty of detection is compounded by the hectic and eventful atmosphere surrounding a birth, making it an especially inopportune time to identify and broach such a sensitive issue, especially if an abusive father is present.
Their language difficulties are compounded by deficits in speech sound production and intelligibility (Kent 2013).
Unlike Indigenous societies in other nations, such as Canada and New Zealand, the presumption of terra nullius by the colonizer meant that the sources and pretexts of Indigenous law and custom were not sought, which compounds the difficulty of defining the authority of customary law in the contemporary context.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z