Sentence examples for of widespread work from inspiring English sources

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In 1979 Prime Minister James Callaghan appeared nonchalant in the face of widespread work stoppages, and a result was the so-called "winter of discontent" in which strikes halted essential services and speeded the end of a Labor government.

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Even Warner Sallman's Head of Christ, the most widespread work of American art, had one pastor concerned that it was "too much of a come-on for the homos in the parish and in the community".

12According to OECD (2011, p. 96):"The public provision of UI tends be more costly in emerging economies due to the presence of widespread informal work and its tendency to reinforce informational problems, i.e. adverse selection and moral hazard.

We met Massey and Barker in the ever-changing "Student Corridor" of Manchester, where, above the din of widespread construction work in a city where the only constant is flux, they explained why their music has always been about progress.

Surveys were completed by 3,700 housing, healthcare, social care, local government, central government, policing and voluntary sector staff and results revealed a widespread working culture of rising stress, increased workloads and long hours.

Whistleblowers due to give public evidence of widespread fraud in welfare to work companies were gagged following the intervention of Tory MPs, it was claimed on Tuesday.

The cases stemmed from a 2011 fiasco that erupted when sheriff's officials discovered the FBI was investigating allegations of widespread inmate abuse by deputies working in county jails.

The combination of widespread discontentment and exhaustion with high work-esteem may be suggestive of an experience of work that differs from the "existential" work-centered professional culture around which the MBI was developed in the West, and perhaps the necessity of measuring burnout in the region with an alternative instrument developed locally.

She filed a complaint with the service saying that she had been the victim of sexual assault and harassment, and that she had also been forced to endure a hostile work environment because of widespread and open displays of graphic materials that were demeaning toward women.

Blood was considered to be interesting to work with, because of widespread folk ideas about its capacity to induce aggression in violent contexts.

A 2013 Politico profile of the NYT called "Turbulence at the Times" used anonymous sources to paint Abramson as "a source of widespread frustration" for being "difficult to work with," while her replacement, Dean Baquet, came out unscathed, despite admitting to slamming his hand against a wall in anger during an argument with Abramson.

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