Sentences with phrase «in low intensity»

Eloïse received her undergraduate degree in Psychology (BS) from the University West of England, postgraduate certificate in Low Intensity Psychological Therapies from the Anglia Ruskin University, and post graduate diploma (a 2 year Masters - level program) in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy from the University of Hertfordshire.
Laura earned a BS in Psychology from University of London, UK and a postgraduate certificate in low intensity cognitive behavioral therapy from University of Exeter, UK.
To improve the fertility of their soil on heavily managed plots, they would burn their organic waste in low intensity fires and add the resulting char to the soil.
Overall, the study's findings suggest that, in the absence of higher - quality alternatives, participation in a low intensity preschool program may have some limited positive long term effects.
Even the other studies you cited with different intensities didn't have have group with 100 % in the low intensity zone -LRB-?).
Burnout results in a low intensity game from the team that is suffering, and this is exactly what we got from Tottenham at White Hart Lane on Saturday afternoon.
Get Grooving at Your Own Pace with the Zumba Dance - Fitness Party in a lower intensity workout designed especially by Baby Boomers for Baby Boomers

Not exact matches

Regarding intensity, a study published in PLOS ONE found that workout intensity was not affected for individuals talking on the phone, compared to those not using a cell phone, but when it came to texting, workout intensity was significantly lower.
He's a big believer in high - intensity, low - frequency weight training.
Soft, soothing music is low in arousal, which measures the intensity of a piece (while my husband's picks are at the extreme other end of the scale).
A 2008 study published in the Journal Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics concluded that inactive individuals who normally complained of fatigue experienced increases in energy of up to 20 percent and decreased fatigue as much as 65 percent by participating in regular, low - intensity physical activity.
In the charts, capital intensity is represented as the ratio of capital costs to wages, with anything under 0.125 considered low intensity.
But there are plenty of growth industries with low - capital intensityin other words, they rely more on labor than equipment.
They work to distort our view of the causes of these problems and they hope to obscure the direct relationship that exists between implementation of low - intensity - conflict strategy and widespread suffering in Nicaragua.
The development or improvement of Special Operations Forces (SOF) was a critical component in low - intensity - conflict strategy to fight effectively «World War III» or, more accurately, to wage war against the poor throughout the third world.
A more urgent question is this: Will U.S. citizens recognize in time to save themselves and others that low - intensity - conflict strategy is far more compatible with fascism than democracy?
There is a common saying in Central America that summarizes the fundamental contradiction in U.S. low - intensity - conflict strategy: «Everything has changed except the reality.»
In the eyes of low - intensity - conflict planners, regional initiatives were signs of a deeper and potentially far more dangerous rebellion challenging Latin America's «backyard status» within the U.S. empire.
It is a conscious part of low - intensity - conflict strategy that other people do the dying in the U.S. war against the poor.
A fourth lesson that has shaped low - intensity conflict in the post-Vietnam period is the importance of making effective use of repression and terror.
Low - intensity conflict utilizes a variety of means in order to control hearts and minds and separate people from revolutionary movements.
U.S. low - intensity - conflict strategy utilized generalized and targeted terrorism in Nicaragua in service to a broader geopolitical, psychological objective.
«Low intensity conflict is an economical option which we must, as a result of Vietnam, recognize as a legitimate form of conflict at least for the next twenty years, stated a former U.S. Army officer and veteran of the war in Southeast Asia.
A second acceptable end - result of low - intensity - conflict strategy in Nicaragua was to make people suffer.
Low - intensity - conflict planners define victory in terms of a sliding scale of acceptable outcomes.
• The use of deception and disinformation as discussed earlier is a central feature in low - intensity conflict's psychological - war techniques.
«Our most pressing problem is not in the Third World,» a supporter of low - intensity conflict from the Rand Corporation states, «but here at home in the struggle for the minds of the people....
In addition to distorted images concerning the Sandinistas, low - intensity - conflict planners have repeatedly lied to cover up atrocities committed by the contras.
Low - intensity conflict seeks to manage images, to control minds, and to give the appearance of reforms while leaving the structures of violence in place.
It is likely that low - intensity - conflict planners, in the post-Reagan phase of their global war against the poor, will continue creatively to mix military, economic, psychological and diplomatic aspects of warfare in response to specific needs.
U.S. low - intensity - conflict strategy in El Salvador utilized generalized terror against civilians in order to sow fear and shape the collective memory of the people.
Low - intensity - conflict strategy is part of a U.S. global war against the poor designed to manage social change in ways that protect perceived U.S. interests while maintaining, at least for its own people, the image of democratic ideals.
The management of repression and terrorism is clearly seen in the implementation of low - intensity - conflict strategy in Central America.
The central role of terrorism in low - intensity - conflict strategy against the Nicaraguan people is related to a fifth lesson learned from the U.S. war in Vietnam.
The second challenge is presented by the emergence of «asymmetrical» or «fourth generation» warfare — conflicts that do not involve nation states (the war on terrorism, for example, involves nonstate entities like al - Qaeda) or involve them in «low - intensity» or clandestine combat (like the U.S. involvement in guerrilla warfare in Central America in the 1980s).
The talk was one of the longest of the visit and was delivered with a low - key intensity; so palpable was his urgency in inviting young people to dare the course of sainthood.
The primary focus of this book is on U.S. low - intensity - conflict strategy in Central America because of my personal ties and experiences in the region.
Low - intensity conflict is so broad in scope, so cynical in outlook, so damaging in practice that it presents Christians and churches in the United States with a situation similar to that faced by the Confessing churches in Nazi Germany.
However, low - intensity conflict is a globalwide strategy played out in distinct ways in places like Angola, Afghanistan, and the Philippines.
I shall analyze how low - intensity conflict is a comprehensive, totalitarian - like project through which the United States seeks to manage social change in the third world in order to protect perceived vital interests.
This book is in many ways a description of my own journey to understand the comprehensive nature and dangerous consequences of low - intensity conflict.
Chapter 3, «Low - Intensity Conflict: The Strategy,» will examine the economic, psychological, diplomatic, and military components of low - intensity warfare, with specific examples drawn from U.S. policy in Central AmeriLow - Intensity Conflict: The Strategy,» will examine the economic, psychological, diplomatic, and military components of low - intensity warfare, with specific examples drawn from U.S. policy in CentralIntensity Conflict: The Strategy,» will examine the economic, psychological, diplomatic, and military components of low - intensity warfare, with specific examples drawn from U.S. policy in Central Amerilow - intensity warfare, with specific examples drawn from U.S. policy in Centralintensity warfare, with specific examples drawn from U.S. policy in Central America.
In chapter 1, «Redefining the Enemy,» I describe the present global economic order as one in need of fundamental restructuring, and how the United States through low - intensity conflict seeks to block or control any such changeIn chapter 1, «Redefining the Enemy,» I describe the present global economic order as one in need of fundamental restructuring, and how the United States through low - intensity conflict seeks to block or control any such changein need of fundamental restructuring, and how the United States through low - intensity conflict seeks to block or control any such changes.
The term itself is unknown to most U.S. citizens yet low - intensity conflict is the key strategy by which the United States seeks to project its power in the third world in order to protect perceived vital interests.
The weight of human suffering in Central America led me to explore the theoretical and practical world of low - intensity conflict.
I shall explore what It might mean to live as a confessing people in the context of the radical sin of low - intensity conflict and how we can faithfully respond to the present historical moment in which our participation in the structures of oppression call us to be prophetic witnesses and living signs of hope.
Low - intensity conflict, which defines the poor as enemy, is clearly in conflict with a biblical God who takes sides with the poor.
Elections in El Salvador, like those held elsewhere as part of low - intensity - conflict strategy, did not change the fundamental power relationships within the country.
Elections are part of low - intensity conflict's preferred strategy to protect U.S. interests in the third world.
The media is a critical actor in the war of images that is so central to low - intensity conflict.
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