Sentences with phrase «victimisation at»

Politicians of every ideological flavour are united by one thing: their self - pitying sense of victimisation at the hands of the press.

Not exact matches

I have also felt the effects of bullying, victimisation, and harassment at the hands of Zee.
We were unaware of, at the time, a victimisation campaign by Mr Clarke towards Elliott and other members of the Conservative Way Forward, which was getting steadily worse.
We reject this clear attempt at victimisation by the EC,» it said.
However, the University of Leicester team suggests that women who are attracted to dominant men generally feel more at risk of victimisation, even when their risk of victimisation is actually low.
At Uppsala University, we work for a study environment free from discrimination, harassment, and victimisation.
Whether they are already involved in gangs or are at risk of victimisation by gangs, we can ensure young people receive the support they need.
Further, in Webster & Vaseghi Lord Justice Smith, again obiter, expressed the view that some sympathy might be found in respect of the submission that victimisation is difficult to prove at times if the «without prejudice» rule is rigorously applied.
On the point about the availability of a victimisation claim against the potential employers, the court said (at para 92) that such actions could be difficult in practice and it was doubtful that Parliament intended the victimisation action to weaken the remedies that the employee should have against the original employer.
It was accepted by the EAT that the claim presented by Nicholls was actually one of victimisation rather than harassment as alleged and at the time of the alleged acts, Nicholls was no longer employed by the Corin Tech Limited.
Children with data from at least one maternally rated peer victimisation assessment between the ages of 3.4 and 6.2 years were included.
The ANROWS funded project — «Establishing the connection» [between alcohol and other drug use and sexual victimisation]-- presented by Mary Stathopoulos, Senior Research Officer at the Australian Institute of Family Studies called for better coordination between the two sectors to help serve clients experiencing both these issues.
Current child abuse prevention efforts often focus on younger children, but our results suggest that adolescents are also vulnerable to abuse victimisation (with 32.3 % of the adolescents in this sample experiencing at least one type of frequent abuse victimisation).
Child physical and emotional abuse victimisation were measured (at both baseline and follow - up assessments) using five items from the UNICEF Measures for National - level Monitoring of OVC.23 Participants were asked to state frequency of abuse in the past year (never, happened but not past year, at least once, monthly and weekly).
While it has been reported that siblings of children with ADHD are at increased risk for conduct and emotional disorders, 20 a more recent study presenting sibling accounts of ADHD identified disruption caused by symptoms and behavioural manifestations of ADHD as the most significant problem.21 This disruption was experienced by siblings in three primary ways: victimisation, caretaking, and sorrow and loss.
At its broadest, an address to the issue of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander victimisation is related to a much broader response to the systemic issues that affect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and communities — an address to poverty and overcrowding in communities is required, for example.
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