Sentences with phrase «considered as an impediment»

Rail: They evoke that painting from observation is not obsolete, and it should not be considered as an impediment to postmodernist practice.

Not exact matches

One might consider much of what appears to be unidentifiably Christian as mere baggage, the social impediments that must travel along with the activity of recognizable devotion so that the church can persist through the many moments and circumstances each week during which members are not engaged in specific witness to their Christian faith.
Still another impediment has been fear that the initiative's «avoided emissions» strategy would lead to similar plans being considered as part of future global warming / climate change treaty negotiations.
When installing security fencing several design factors must be considered, such as the fencing having sufficient height and strength, the use of climbing impediments and secure ground fixings, as well as the provision of clear areas to facilitate surveillance and maintenance.
Considering all the impediments to wholesale high - school reform and the absence of true consensus as to the nature and urgency of the problem, I conclude that diversity and experimentation are a reasonable way to proceed in mid-decade, rather than pressing for elusive agreement about a single national strategy.
The CJEU's reasoning mainly focuses on the third question, considering this to be the «essence» of Italian's judge's request, and reformulates the question as follows: «does a national rule such as that established by the provisions at issue [amount] to an impediment to the effective fight against VAT evasion in the Member State concerned, in a manner incompatible with Directive 2006/112 and, more generally, with EU law» (§ 34)?
We suggested that the main impediment to a more technological legal process resides in the rituals and practices that we, as legal practitioners, have come to consider as being unimpeachable.
The key points in the court's decision were as follows: (i) It referred to the High Court's decision in R (AW) v Croydon LBC [2005] EWHC 2950 (Admin), [2005] All ER (D) 251 (Dec) which held that where the fresh grounds for asylum were «manifestly nothing of the sort» then a local authority considering whether an applicant's human rights required accommodation to be provided could in limited cases ignore the purported new claim and operate on the assumption that there is no impediment to the individual leaving the UK.
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