Sentences with phrase «widespread disillusionment»

"Widespread disillusionment" refers to a feeling of disappointment or loss of faith that is widely experienced by many people. Full definition
Amidst widespread disillusionment with the policy, the coalition government revised the strategy in 2011.
A BBC survey last month found widespread disillusionment among doctors, with 34 per cent of GPs and 11 per cent of hospital doctors wanting to scrap the programme and just two per cent and three per cent respectively saying it was a good use of NHS funds.
Despite widespread disillusionment, initially at least, because of a perceived lack of specificity and focus, the document has a lot of gems in its 283 paragraphs (XIII).
Minnich said he had not seen any survey data showing widespread disillusionment among teachers.
Josh Kline's immersive installation, Freedom, addresses the sense of widespread disillusionment and upheaval in a climate of surveillance and builds a critique through samples of digitally archived political - media content and references to mass data tracking and social unrest.
There was further evidence of women's widespread disillusionment with parliament today, after a new survey showed huge levels of distrust and anger about the British political system.
The question is raised how relevant liberation theology is, if it owes so much to Marxism, in the wake of the collapse of the socialist system in Eastern Europe and the widespread disillusionment it has created.
There is widespread disillusionment both with the characteristic reliance of liberals on government and of conservatives on the market to combat social ills.
Since then, however, Tunisian Islamists shared the widespread disillusionment with both the Islamic revolution and the trajectory of Sudanese Islamism.
The devolved government faces enormous challenges — Brexit, widespread disillusionment with the parties on offer and a power - sharing structure that arguably inhibits progress.
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