Example sentences of "in this section [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 So far in this section we have looked at the present provision of training and at ways of improving the system .
2 Accordingly , in this section we shall expand the three levels of prevention to four , that is , primary , secondary , tertiary , and quaternary .
3 In this section we examine the clash of interests which soil erosion brings about , and we ask whose interests they are and how they are pursued in the face of conflict .
4 In this section we shall consider d , the difference in proportions ( Davis 1976 ) .
5 In this section we have concentrated on one type of white-collar crime , corporate crime .
6 In this section we will concentrate on region II , and put .
7 In this section we will consider techniques for solving these problems and , in passing , illustrate how dual simplex iterations may be carried out using compact tableaux .
8 In this section we will assume that p objective functions are arranged in decreasing order of priority .
9 In this section we will describe some ways in which the choices involved in applying the B & B method may be resolved .
10 In this section we will offer some suggestions , all of which have proved valuable in practice , intended to render more efficient the implementation of the B & B method on large ILPs and , especially , large MILPs .
11 In this section we continue the story from the point reached in the ‘ Politics ’ section in Chapter 1 — the year 1815 and the illusion of the eighteenth century restored to Europe .
12 In this section we shall look at some scientific mysteries that are rather more profound than the skin-colours of dinosaurs or prehistoric human beings .
13 In this section we consider some equalities and inequalities as they are manifested in relation to education .
14 In this section we outline some ways in which educational inequalities and the pursuit of educational equalities have been studied .
15 In this section we intend to explain how such policies involve the relationship between objectives , targets , and instruments .
16 In this section we are not so much concerned with how many pounds are ‘ in the pay packet ’ , i.e. what is earned , but rather with the general conditions of employment experienced by the manual and non-manual sectors .
17 In this section we briefly discuss the forms of data transfer instruction commonly found on word-oriented computers : first for whole-word transfers , then for the larger subdivisions of the word ( such as the half-word ) , and finally for multiple-word transfers .
18 In this section we attempt to provide a framework for discussion of a number of special instructions ( or groups of instructions ) , provided in current computers or proposed for the future , which do not naturally fit into these groups .
19 Finally in this section we prove ( at last ! ) that every irreducible element in Z is necessarily a prime element so that the concepts of primeness and irreducibility coincide in Z. We need a definition and a trivial consequence .
20 In this section we present ( essentially ) two number-theoretic results of which much use is made in many areas of mathematics .
21 In this section we shall look at the formal devices used to mark the boundaries of chunks of both written and spoken discourse which form large units of some kind , such as paragraphs .
22 Now , in this section we look at three distinct theoretical frameworks that attempt to explain the nature of these changes .
23 In this section we address this question by examining how the differing theories approach , first , the international dimension and , second , structural change .
24 In this section we have been considering their respective accounts of structural change .
25 In this section we look at the arguments of Daniel Bell ( 1973 , 1980 ) which remain the clearest and most influential account of the changes involved in the transition from industrialism to post-industrialism .
26 In this section we have been considering the properties of hierarchies in general .
27 In this section we consider the potential users of public sector accounting information and the kinds of information they need .
28 In this section we provide a brief history of the development of penal thought in the West to show how different combinations of penal justifications have found favour in different eras .
29 In this section we examine the contribution to the crisis that has been made by the sentencing decisions of the courts .
30 In this section we examine some of the policy options that have been suggested as solutions to the crisis , and in the next we will conclude with an examination of the government 's response , and its prospects for success .
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