Example sentences of "[noun] that young people " in BNC.

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1 The Minister must be aware of the shortage of affordable housing in villages and towns in rural areas , with the result that young people have to leave those areas to find suitable accommodation .
2 Perhaps your correspondent could enlighten us as to the best method of preventing unwanted teenage pregnancy , bearing in mind that young people will always form sexual relationships , regardless of the wishes of their parents or anyone else to the contrary .
3 This will give you valuable insights into the kinds of skills and attitudes that young people bring with them to work and help you to understand how their needs and interests can contribute positively to the work place .
4 It is no wonder that young people with no job , no prospects , little money and probably feeling that no one cares , should turn to petty crime .
5 Either they are doing the work that younger people could and perhaps should be doing ; or they are part of a growing population of retired people whose idleness is creating social and financial difficulties for the rest of the productive population .
6 There is the danger that young people become permanently criminalised .
7 I do not draw the simple conclusion that young people have been badly treated — as they have — during the last 12 years .
8 Despite all the fine statements that young people are the future of the country , they are still a disadvantaged group and will remain so until they are made a priority policy target .
9 That 's always been the case , it 's only in recent years that young people have been allowed to go out and enjoy themselves .
10 Let's hear about all the good things that young people are doing around our diocese .
11 One would think , one of the things that young people decide was that they wanted facilities in their area .
12 I continued donating until late 1987 when the pressures of my early twenties swept me into a few years of self neglect by alcohol and all those unhealthy things that young people do .
13 The investigators focus on the patterns of social relationships and resources that young people utilize in moving towards adult status and a position in the employment market .
14 There is also evidence that younger people expect to transfer the source of their main emotional support to their spouse when they marry .
15 Paton shared Smith 's belief that young people should be kept under the influence of the Church and that they required discipline and order .
16 The camp was run by a staff dedicated to the belief that young people thrived on fresh air , early morning runs and cold showers .
17 It is the feeling that young people are a burden on a society which does not need their labour or even specific skills .
18 This withering criticism of the youth of the nation was reflected by the way in which all manner of novel terms — the ‘ mixed-up teenagers ’ , the ‘ wild ones ’ , the ‘ rebels without a cause ’ — entered into common usage in the 1950s , conveying the feeling that young people were somehow more radically unintelligible to older people than at any previous time in history .
19 The new element in the situation seems to be the regular access that young people have to drugs , including illegal ones .
20 The impoverished areas that black Britons settle in means that young people are far more at risk both in terms of levels of offending , and in terms of police surveillance .
21 Old people are often a source of fascinating information and opinion about the past that young people are being taught as history !
22 Awareness that young people seem to be particularly able readers of ‘ body language ’ and other non-verbal revelations of attitude .
23 Initially , in the early 1960s , these were concerned to test the social-psychological assumption that young people 's entry into work could be explained by the idea of ‘ occupational choice ’ .
24 Now the Masai are torn by the need to go to school ( schule in Swahili , a leftover of German occupation ) and the understanding that young people who go to school are lost to the traditional ways .
25 Such indications that young people may not view the CAB as being in touch with their attitudes and problems has prompted many bureaux to devise special outreach projects .
26 An examination by Richards ( 1982 ) of the factors employed in the recruitment of apprentices in the East Midlands illustrates some of the problems in this area , especially in relation to the current occupationalist assertion that young people will benefit from a more ‘ vocational ’ education in order to counteract their lack of experience .
27 The farm dance was the only way that young people could get together in those parts , and a great deal of matchmaking went on .
28 Whereas the standards and styles set by the peer group can set highly influential markers around acceptable and unacceptable behaviours for young people it is in individual friendships that young people find support and security , negotiate their emotional independence , exchange information , put beliefs and feelings into words and develop a new and different perspective of themselves .
29 Roberts ( 4.5 ) surveys the literature on youth , pointing out that the traditional focus on how youth cultures have functioned so as to reconcile young people to adult roles in employment and family life have lost a crucial element — the expectation that young people ( especially those with only basic education ) would have jobs available .
30 At these times , the scarcity of employment opportunities has led to the view that older people should give up their jobs in order that younger people can benefit from the experience of work .
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