Sentence examples for jointly concern from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The cases, which the court, the New York State Court of Appeals, is considering jointly, concern relatively narrow executive and administrative orders in recent years that extended benefits like health insurance to same-sex spouses of government employees who married in jurisdictions where such marriages are legal, and, in one county, required local officials to treat same-sex couples as married.

Similar(59)

At Lucca the bishop and the commune were jointly concerned about the claims of the Abbey of Fucecchio because of its ties to neighbouring Pisa.

Last year, he denied claims from former Commons clerk Malcolm Jack that the Lords had refused to buy champagne jointly over concerns it wouldn't meet Lords standards.

The Stern Business School and the economics department jointly expressed concerns that its cost would crush the university, forcing tuition increases and lower teacher-student ratios.

Nick Kaye described a scheme in his area of Newquay, run jointly with Age Concern, under which pharmacists from the town were able to carry out home visits to help tailor care to elderly people.

We welcome a constructive, amicable discussion with management to jointly address our concerns".

That is an exaggeration, intended to deny employees the right — and the power — that comes from jointly pressing their concerns.

For instance, the apparently different odds of being disciplined when litigated alone and jointly, respectively, raise concerns about whether these categories should be offered a differentiated means of legal advice when navigating the complaint process.

Government veterinarians jointly identified diseases of concern at the district or zonal level.

What one gets is a dialogical principle of universalization (U): "A [moral norm] is valid just in case the foreseeable consequences and side-effects of its general observance for the interests and value-orientations of each individual could be jointly accepted by all concerned without coercion" (i.e., in a sufficiently reasonable discourse) (1998a, 42; trans. amended).

Habermas thus proposes a dialogical principle of universalization, (U), stating that a moral norm "is valid just in case the foreseeable consequences and side-effects of its general observance for the interests and value-orientations of each individual could be jointly accepted by all concerned without coercion" (Habermas 1998, 42).

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