Sentence examples similar to training coercion from inspiring English sources

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Negotiation usually doesn't happen nor even attempted because teachers themselves are trained through coercion and persuasion and see nothing wrong with using these to indoctrinate their students.

It then links this to 9 intervention functions (Education, Persuasion, Incentivisation, Coercion, Training, Restriction, Environmental Restructuring, Modeling and Enablement) and 7 types of policy that could be used to implement these intervention functions (Mass-media/marketing, Legislation, Fiscal policy, Service provision, Guideline development, Regulation and Environmental/social planning).

Female research assistants were trained on sexual coercion, the use of a non judgmental attitude while collecting data, how to recognize and respond to participants with emotional changes as well as to refer those who needed help.

Skills training schemes driven by coercion, welfare sanctions and short-term expediency will fail in the longer term.

The guidance and training materials warn against coercion, but reflect a robust approach now advocated by NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT), which has found that the proportion of families giving consent, where necessary, has proved "stubbornly resistant to change".

It investigated the traditional assumptions about what motivates soldiers to fight: patriotism, ideology, religion, ideals of duty and honour and manhood; glory and adventure; training and discipline; and coercion.

While Keegan later decided this theory was too simple, Kamienski argues that, on top of the inducement provided by dehumanizing training regimes and the coercion that sees nations force people to fight in their name, "narcosis" can be read literally: in order to kill other people, human beings need to put themselves in a different frame of mind.

While Keegan later decided this theory was too simple, Kamienski argues that, on top of the inducement provided by dehumanising training regimes and the coercion that sees nations force people to fight in their name, "narcosis" can be read literally: in order to kill other people, human beings need to put themselves in a different frame of mind.

The theory was that soldiers could be trained to resist such coercion if they had practice enduring it.

The violence, fear and coercion continue through training, and on to the racecourses themselves, where novice horses - well out of contention - can be repeatedly whipped.

If, as the government argues, personnel assigned to Guantánamo "go through extensive professional and sensitivity training" and the Red Cross discovers physical coercion "tantamount to torture" (front page, Nov. 30), shouldn't we be asking the government to define "sensitivity training"?

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