Sentence examples for may coerce from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

"Such programs intrude on personal privacy, may ignore the risk of domestic violence and may coerce women to marry," said Timothy J. Casey, a lawyer at the fund.

Mill, who believed that each individual is in a unique position to know what's in her best interest, concluded that government may coerce citizens to refrain only from acts that are hazardous to others, and has no warrant for regulating an individual's behavior.

Two Republican commissioners who wanted to repeal the rules dissented from the decision, saying that the temporary suspension may coerce the broadcasters to air programs and endorsements they might otherwise have withheld, to prove to regulators that the rules are unnecessary.

The state, according to this view, may coerce only if it does so neutrally between such understandings.

Some do not allow the accused to take part in the trial and may coerce suspects into making a false confession.

While it is unethical to provide incentives of a disproportional magnitude (financial or otherwise) that may coerce individuals to participate, especially those who are economically vulnerable, or where inducements are undue [ 14], it is unreasonable not to make participation as easy and rewarding as possible for those who do consent.

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Similar(53)

But on the face of it, if there is plausibility in both arguments, then the law may legitimately coerce to prevent harm and it may legitimately coerce to prevent, in some cases, (harmless) indignity.

Individuals can decide to waive their constitutional rights and cooperate with investigators, but officials may not coerce them to do so.

How to reconcile the right of private religious institutions and private individuals to function effectively in the public square (for example, the right of a Hillel house or a Christian fraternity to limit membership to those who share its religious views) with the equally important rule that government may not coerce religious observance in public institutions is not an easy question.

The latter part of this argument is an important one, and requires comprehensive review by governmental bodies to prevent exploitation, either by the person who argues personal utility for societal benefit, or the society that may implicitly coerce such a person into pursuing this potential collective benefit at expense of their own autonomy.

By E. B. White The New Yorker, March 17 , 1945P. 21 A security league in which some nations may be coerced and other nations may not does not recommend itself to the logical mind.

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