Example sentences of "[n mass] at [adj] levels " in BNC.

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1 For future planning the report recommended the regular collection and review of statistics at four levels :
2 It proposes a series of measures which include increasing the production and distribution of AV programmes , making more people aware of their potential for education and nation-building , offering more training in AV skills , and modifying communication legislation in order to provide more democratic access to audio visual media at all levels of society .
3 This refers to the authority conferred on a leader from the people at lower levels in the organisation .
4 MRS Jacki Taylor , 37 , senior sales manager at Swithland 's Hall Green branch , Birmingham , said her success in the motor trade was due to her ability to ‘ talk to people at all levels and my knowledge of the product ’ .
5 This problem , also experienced to some extent in Nicaragua , has been particularly acute in Mozambique because of the high levels of illiteracy and shortages of skilled people at all levels , and the legacy of a highly authoritarian colonial school system .
6 If this interpretation is correct , curriculum managers who wish to manage the curriculum in the sense of modifying it so that it is better adapted to the needs of real children and a real society , will be best advised not simply to resist and criticise , but rather to use the power that many people at all levels of the system actually have .
7 Between 1975 and 1985 , we will have hired nearly 18000 people at all levels .
8 What Sherman 's circle perhaps does not emphasize sufficiently is the impact that dominant social ideology about the nature of old age has upon personal problems of older people at all levels of experience , emotional , social and financial .
9 For the core workers who are permanent staff again there may well be a mixture of people at all levels and here there is more emphasis on career progression and job satisfaction .
10 Nevertheless , nothing ever changes unless a conscious effort is made to change it and no organization will make it happen unless its people at all levels are switched on .
11 People at all levels of the organization can accomplish very much more than they are asked to under contemporary conventions .
12 Their central concern is to reach more people at all levels of society and to become more deeply involved in their lives .
13 The TD knows the right people at all levels of the bureaucracy and can pull innumerable strings .
14 Racism of this kind is constantly experienced by black people at all levels of society even if it takes the more subtle form of simply being treated differently .
15 ‘ They 've obviously got to be able to speak to people at all levels , ’ said a supervisor of his field men .
16 Job demarcations were rare , and people at all levels were expected and encouraged to develop skills in areas other than those in which they were directly employed .
17 He and his wife Ann were unstinting of their time in attending lectures , functions and committees and they won the affection and admiration of a great many people at all levels .
18 In 1988 he was appointed regional co-ordinator for Asia , Caribbean and East Africa when once again his knowledge of the business , determination to succeed and his ability to persuade people at all levels to do what was necessary , produced excellent results .
19 Events are organised at national , regional and local level and cater for people at all levels of ability .
20 ‘ Probably the most important thing was being able to bring together and keep together a strong collection of people at all levels .
21 You have to be able to deal with people at all levels .
22 The first of those is leadership , that intangible attribute which can inspire and motivate people at all levels to achieve the impossible .
23 The facts of the matter in Oxford are that there is an enormous housing crisis and that affects people at all levels .
24 Four times people at higher levels tried to kill it off , and four times the people working on it came back and fought for it , argued for it , provided justification and evidence for why it should continue : ‘ Just give us a little more time ; we know we can make it work . ’
25 Even within agencies , the aims and approaches of people at different levels of the professional hierarchy are often at odds .
26 These can be manpower modelling systems which are concerned with the number and type of people at different levels in the organisation or at different stages of their careers or with some other manpower dimension .
27 However , in presenting profit as ultimately unpaid labour , Marx suggests that if the total of goods or capital in a social system is unequally divided between people at different levels in the social-industrial hierarchy , exploitation is necessarily taking place .
28 As Stoker argues above , contracting out has largely been used as a threat to achieve other forms of change , often by senior bureaucrats to gain concessions from and changes in work practices by staff at lower levels of the hierarchy .
29 On the contrary he suggests that because public choice theory narrowly defines bureaucratic behaviour in terms of budget or staff maximization , it fails to grasp more important aspects of bureaucratic rationality — such as the desire to avoid conflict from troublesome staff at lower levels and interference from councillors .
30 The staff at all levels are committed to the project and its goals .
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