Sentence examples for broadly unfair from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

He could not know for certain that Downing Street had "sexed up" the dossier, far less whether Alastair Campbell, the government's powerful communications chief, had personally inserted the claim that Iraq's weapons of mass destruction could be ready in just 45 minutes.The evidence so far before the Hutton inquiry suggests that the first charge was broadly unfair and the second pure speculation.

More broadly, unfair terms of trade and their contribution to health inequalities within and across countries has been the subject of scrutiny.

Similar(57)

The principle of justice prohibits unfair discrimination, and broadly favours optimising resource utilisation.

Also, deciding retroactively to broadly subsidize tuition would be patently unfair to those students who worked hard to earn tuition money or pay off their loans.

The panel's report, issued in December, 2011, confirmed a broadly accepted opinion that Khodorkovsky's prosecution was unfair and unlawful.

Health equity, broadly defined as the reduction of avoidable and unfair inequalities in health, recently emerged as a central concern amongst a wide range of actors in global health, with the World Health Organization's (WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Healthh (CSDH) playing a pivotal role in its promotion.

Clearly, Lilly Ledbetter's case resonated broadly with so many Americans because it was blatantly unfair.

Granting that it is unfair to expect the show's four artists to be broadly representative, a visitor here may ponder whether modern revolutionaries, in divesting themselves of traditional technique, purchased expressive freedom at the cost of soulful complexity.

These unfair disparities contribute to not only the achievement gap, but an opportunity gap, existing broadly between the experiences provided to students from low-income communities and their peers from affluent families.

Likewise, any penalties apply broadly to foreign exporters and are not tailored to punish specific countries or companies viewed as practicing unfair competition.

JUSTICE pointed out that the legislation is drafted so broadly that it "will be very easy for an officer to justify an arrest" and that this could lead to unfair targeting of ethnic minority groups.

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