Sentences with phrase «done under that rubric»

Some of that rethinking has been done under the rubric of the history of «confessionalization,» a term used to denote the deployment of religion to create or reinforce social and political identities.

Not exact matches

In the exciting days of November 1989, during the occupation strike at Charles University in Prague, the students initiated a cycle of lectures under the rubric of «what they did not teach us at school.»
I will do this under two rubrics.
I have been present at celebrations of the Mass of Paul VI in the diocese of Plymouth in which (for all Bishop Budd's demands now that priests should be «competent» to celebrate the 1962 Rite, and scrupulous in observing its rubrics) the officiating priest was neither particularly «competent», even in English, nor was he in any way concerned scrupulously to adhere to the rubrics — or does rubrical scrupulosity not apply under the Spirit of Vatican II?
When Jon Sobrino discusses Jesus» approach to prayer, he does so under the rubric of «Jesus Criticism of Contemporary Prayer» (CC 146).
Another variation on the «make it, don't buy it» theme, baptizing things like vinegar and baking soda under the rubric of Christian stewardship.
De Blasio said the announcement from Sessions fell under the «same rubric» of what he, Police Commissioner James O'Neill and Zachary Carter, the city's corporation counsel, said when Trump rolled out an executive order in January that would withhold funds for «sanctuary cities» — that they «don't believe it holds water legally.»
«Our team measures the impact of the elements of health care that don't fall under the rubric of «tricks of the trade» — in other words, the symbols, rituals, patient and provider mindsets, and therapeutic encounters,» he says.
The organizers of «Jew York,» a show at Zach Feuer and Untitled galleries in New York last summer, were turned down by several artists who didn't want to appear under such a rubric.
pat - «Similarly many environmental activists believe that man's influence is a form of sin and nature (Gaea) will soon strike back...» You can phrase the position of a fictitious group any way you want of course, without rebuttal, because they don't really exist, though there are people who fit the description — especially if by «many» you mean more than three — but the more accurate reality is most of the human beings you would lump under the rubric «environmentalist» would more accurately be described as believing that short - sighted and greedy human attempts at total control and domination and complete disregard for the healthof the environment have gotten us out of balance with what was an interlocking web of balanced and dynamic systems, and would appear to have unbalanced many of those systems as well, including the still poorly understood cycles of climate; or weather, as we laymen call it.
André Friedli: ``...... As far as I can discern from various documents I've found on the PG&E website, they have plenty to wiggle - room to do pretty much whatever they want under the rubric of grid integrity and demand response.
There's really a wide gamut of things that we do that fall under the rubric of appellate work that don't involve just sitting behind the computer and writing briefs all day.
I've gathered these under the rubric CanCourts and have put up a simple website explaining what I've done.
One issue that confounds me, though, is the focus of so many of your articles on the corporate side of real estate the CEOs of giant companies (who may or may not themselves be REALTORS ®); the growth of corporate services, such as mortgage lending, escrow and title, inspections, and relocation, which don't fall under the rubric of what NAR members do; and the «sizing up» of companies by adding more and more associates.
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