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Перевод: coercive
[прилагательное] принудительный; коэрцитивный
Тезаурус:
- the Party, in its work, never tired of advancing this programme of national emancipation, in opposition to both the frankly coercive policy of Tsarism and the half-hearted semi-imperialist policy of the Menshevik and Social Revolutionaries
- The Northern state became wholly dominated by protestant loyalists and became extremely coercive in its dealings with the substantial catholic - nationalist remnant within its borders.
- While freedom movements in central and eastern Africa were stimulated by these coercive policies, an effective means of ideological diffusion did not lie in the hands of African cultivators nor their leaders, and therefore the analytical lessons to be drawn did not find their way into the international conventional wisdom about conservation.
- The argument so far has been intended to put forward the possibility that an art work or image could be official and coercive, and unofficial and subversive, all at the same time.
- The action must be explained and initially be persuasive rather than coercive.
- In addition, a failure to pay a demand for taxes that was implicitly supported by the coercive powers of the state might result in unpleasant social and economic consequences for the taxpayer who did not pay.
- Non-cooperation and civil disobedience, as Gandhi understands them, cannot be construed as a coercive threat in this sense.
- The two alliances were ascribed territories in which to produce their social structures, political institutions, coercive bodies, informal and interpersonal networks of maintaining influence, and more clearly defined hegemonic cultures.
- But there was no ambivalence in other writers: Quinney (1975) insisted that the criminal law must be seen simply as "a coercive means of enforcing the capitalist social and economic order on an unwilling populace", and added:
- There are more or less coercive versions of this long-standing pedagogical strategy.
- The coercive aspect of fasting has already been referred to.
- The days of the "coercive children's officer" had arrived (Handler, 1968).
- There is no intention in these arguments to give any sustenance to the view that corporate officials have been so successfully socialized into the "way of life" that they cannot see what they are doing or that the organizational constraints upon them were so tight as to be "coercive" and therefore excusing.
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