Sentences with phrase «widespread sense»

The independent investigation into CBA's governance, culture and accountability launched after last years» money - laundering scandal has found the bank had a «widespread sense of complacency» and a «reactive stance in dealing with risks».
But there seems to be an increasingly widespread sense that we do not have enough good pastors to sustain congregational ministries at high levels.
But there's a question, because the climate issue focuses on energy use, and there's a very widespread sense that if you could create clean energy for everybody, then you no longer have the development problem in the same degree.
A major new report, just released today by the Stockholm Environment Institute and Friends of the Earth Europe, shows that — despite an increasingly widespread sense that climate catastrophe can no longer be averted — radical action, on the necessary scale, is still a very much within the realm of possibility.
Without a widespread sense, in the crucial Rust Belt swing states and elsewhere, that good working - class and middle - class jobs are harder to come by than they used to be, Trumpism could not have succeeded.
By the end of the 1800s, there was a widespread sense that some great entrepreneurs needed to fail before they could succeed.
But there's also a widespread sense that long - term economic prospects are deteriorating all around the world.
The high profile of the disputes stems from a widespread sense among Canadians that the American system is unfair and could have negative economic consequences.
Reasons for this outcome were multiple: though world membership had doubled during Neal C. Wilson's 12 years in office, his authoritarian management style had alienated several constituencies; he had been identified with several demoralizing theological and financial crises; his age, 70, was against him in spite of his astounding vigor, and a widespread sense of deep crisis and need for new directions had gone unanswered.
There is a widespread sense, even apart from post-mortem expectations, that the given order in any society has been established by «God.»
To accomplish the ideal, this freedom must be accompanied by adequate information about personal capabilities and the needs of society, together with a widespread sense of individual responsibility for the good of all.
Probably the strongest obstacle to getting a hearing for this critique of economism is the widespread sense that there is no viable alternative to the current global economy.
This trivialization of nuclear concerns was a misreading of the across - the - board struggle taking place with issues of life and death, of the widespread sense that this may be the «last chance» for human civilization.
This widespread sense that we have lost our prospects reflects a bad trade of confident teleology for acedia.
This, along with the lessons we have drawn from historical events such as the Holocaust, has instilled a widespread sense that «something» must be done when human rights crises explode.
I wrestle with this question in my own classrooms and with my kids, especially these days, living in what Chris Gallagher has called the age of quantification in education: teacher - proof and child - proof classrooms, a widespread sense that if it isn't measurable, it must not be valuable.
By focusing Labour's local and European elections campaign on the «bread and butter» issues of housing stock shortage, rising housing prices, zero - hour contracts and a widespread sense of general economic insecurity, Miliband is trying to diffuse the electoral challenge posed by UKIP.
Both reflect a widespread sense among the English that they are not being well served by either of the Unions of which they are a part.
The Reagan critique of government as inept, scandals Clintonian and more, and the widespread sense that politicians and systems are corrupt -LSB-...]
There seems to be a widespread sense that the Conservative UK government pushed through legislation to legalise gay marriage.
This widespread sense of media conspiracy, of «what the media won't tell you» articles on Facebook, is what tiny online echo chambers do when they need to explain why everyone doesn't agree with them.
This widespread sense of unease lent an impetus to the intellectual critique and shifted the debate toward less ideological and more pragmatic objectives.
«But there is the widespread sense that the school system is trying to do the right things for kids.
The video is only the latest example of a widespread sense of frustration about special education.
There appears to be a widespread sense in veterinary medicine that such testing is necessary and beneficial, even an obvious standard of care.6 - 8 A 2015 survey at the Veterinary Information Network found that while there was considerable variation in the timing of preanesthetic blood work, only 3 percent of the 2,275 veterinarians completing the survey did not require blood such testing in apparently healthy surgical patients.9
But in more recent years, light installations have increasingly become the focus, with a wealth of site - specific works attributing to a widespread sense of acclaim and popularity.
In our first floor galleries, six artists with ties to Kansas City explore a widespread sense of insecurity.
In particular, there is now a vague but widespread sense that the entire range of 25 - 40 % for reductions in Annex I countries range is acceptable, and that «significant deviation from the baseline» might be attained by very modest developing country action.
The widespread sense of scientific controversy contrasts with reviews of climate research and surveys finding that at least 84 percent of scientists agree that the Earth is warming because of human activity.
A major new report, just released today by the Stockholm Environment Institute and Friends of the Earth Europe, shows that — despite an increasingly widespread sense that climate catastrophe can no longer be averted — radical action, on the necessary scale, is still a very real possibility.
There is a widespread sense of powerlessness and distrust of governments and the interests they serve.
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