The phrase
"deep divisions" refers to strong disagreements or conflicts that exist among people, usually due to differing beliefs, opinions, or values.
Full definition
It was the first time edits had been confirmed to have been done on reproductive cells and the news caused
deep divisions within the scientific community.
It is a subject that has caused
deep divisions between the dog breeding community and the wider public, and is one that all new puppy buyers need to be aware of.
That it came at a time
of deep division and renewed pain is part of it; it feels necessary and vital.
Its high number of No voters has
exposed deep divisions and raised questions about whether the party itself is sufficiently progressive and capable of responding to the hanging political landscape.
However it reveals
deep divisions on pricing, DRM — and authors happy to self - publish.
There are
deep divisions within the right about what a forward - looking immigration policy should look like.
Deep divisions between rich and poor countries remain over aid for adopting more climate - friendly energy technologies in developing countries, for instance.
In this unit, students will investigate the challenges of creating a just democracy in a time
of deep division.
It
exposed deep divisions and it was a year of ugly rhetoric and angry, sometimes violent, exchanges among people.
As lawyers, we have
deep divisions on the use of technology within the traditional court process.
Mr Crabb warned of
deep divisions in the Conservative Party if his colleagues continue to describe themselves as «Leave» or «Remain».
Because of
deep division over the «Angela Davis affair,» Dean Hoge conducted a survey among United Presbyterians in New Jersey to learn why the action of the council had drawn such extreme reactions.
Kansas legislators approved an increase in spending on the state's public schools in hopes of meeting a court mandate after the rancorous final days of debate highlighted
deep divisions among Republicans.
The appeal by Tory whips for Labour support to ensure the safety of the bill
highlighted deep divisions in the Conservative party in the wake of claims that a senior member of his entourage described party activists as «swivel - eyed».
Holly depicted the current conditions in which this debate are occurring as rife with
deep divisions created by a binary perspective: agroecology on one side and the industrial agricultural system on the other — a conflict further simplified to mean traditional vs modern, pluriethnic vs Western, resilient and flexible vs rigid and restrictive.
This time, it was in Paterson
where deep divisions have surfaced over the administration's mix of proposals, from changes in educational practices to the closing and reconfiguring of a half - dozen schools.
Ghana coach Goran Stevanovic has
revealed deep divisions within the squad, saying some players used witchcraft against their own team - mates.
Carswell made the admission after he was accused by Farage of having «residual loyalties» to his former party following a furious public bust - up with a Ukip donor, which exposed
deep divisions at the top of the Eurosceptic party.
Pipeline company TransCanada said Thursday it's cancelling a plan to build a pipeline that would ship 1.1 million barrels of oil per day from Western Canada to the Atlantic coast in a decision that exposed
deep divisions across Canada.
The contentious politics surrounding school choice and competition have
produced deep divisions within minority communities and strained traditional alliances of civil rights groups, education organizations, and Democrats.
Eickhout says the commission's proposals
reflect deep divisions among the European Union's 28 member states on energy policy.
The idea of Ofsted inspecting private schools is controversial and would mean exposing the origins of
historically deep divisions between private and state education.
Meanwhile, against the backdrop of the U.N. climate talks, which are aimed at finding a successor agreement to the expiring Kyoto Protocol, the European Union is struggling to reach agreement on its own climate rules —
with deep divisions between governments in Eastern Europe (and Italy), and their comparatively wealthy counterparts in the West.
There are
still deep divisions within the party over a rollback of Obamacare's Medicaid expansion, regulations that could undermine protections for Americans with pre-existing conditions, funding for Planned Parenthood, and numerous other provisions.
Amid cries from opponents of «shame on you» and «gutless cowards,» the Township High School District 211 school board voted early Thursday to give a transgender student access to the girls» locker room, settling a case that thrust the district into the national spotlight and
caused deep divisions in the community.
It will test whether Trump can
overcome deep divisions within his own party on fiscal matters to prioritize aid, and whether he can suspend his adversarial governing style and even postpone his own agenda, notably an overhaul of the tax code.
But that slim majority
belies deep divisions across Islamic sects in Lebanon, with 94 percent of Shia supporting Hezbollah and 84 percent of Sunnis looking on the group unfavorably.
I also believe that our failure to do this has
bred deep divisions within the church and has led to Christianity playing a paramount role in legitimating and exacerbating racial injustice from our nation's origin — colonizing Native Americans, enslaving Diasporic Africans — to our present - day crises of immigration and mass incarceration.
US State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said in a tweet that Washington was «disappointed» by reports of Friday's violence and encouraged «dialogue [with] all parties to
resolve deep divisions».
The healthy response to
such deep divisions would be serious shared theological reflection among persons whose deepest commitments are to Christ.
As we have learned to our peril in the context of the initial Brexit referendum with its
ensuing deep divisions between people and between the nations that make up the kingdom, the Swiss safeguards concerning the majorities needed for something to pass a referendum are there for a reason!
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who allowed Labour MPs a free vote
amid deep divisions in his party, warned against an «ill - thought - out rush to war».
How a hapless prime minister failed to deal adequately with the aftermath of the Leveson report and helped to
foster deep divisions over newspaper regulation
The party's conference in Dundee voted overwhelmingly for a «unity motion» drafted by its Scottish executive
after deep divisions over Corbyn's proposals emerged between the party's centrists and the Labour leadership.
«While party officials are keen to draw a line under the affair, behind the scenes there
remain deep divisions within the Labour movement over how the row was handled.
«The world before us today
exhibits deep divisions and wounds, pronounced inequalities and uncertainties as to the future,» says Venice Biennale chair Paolo Baratta in a press release, explaining the year's theme.
The varying degrees of acceptance and support for this new cryptocurrency
represent deeper divisions in the bitcoin community, specifically about the vision for the future of bitcoin (and cryptocurrency in general) and what will make the market most stable while allowing it to grow.
The president has created
deep divisions among Korean - Americans: Some admire his foreign policy while others are angered by his talk on immigration.
Labour resentment at Umunna, one of its own exposing
deep divisions on Europe with his strongly pro-Single Market amendment to the Queen's Speech, unites the party from Left to Right via the Centre.
As news of the NAACP's shifting stance on public charter schools circulated on progressive blogs, Twitter and other outlets, the disparate reactions
revealed deep divisions among civil rights groups and education leaders over the role charter schools should play in serving kids of color.
«Greece's debt crisis exposed
deep divisions in European solidarity, linked to identity,» Font said.