Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] implication for [art] " in BNC.

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1 Such interaction has implications for the future behaviour of field staff , for enforcement is organized to reflect the ways in which polluters define their behaviour and the ‘ pollution ’ .
2 The collapse of Spinward has implications for the whole of the human-occupied galaxy .
3 The importance of these sources of income has implications for the income in old age of men and women who are now in their fifties and who are faced with long-term unemployment or early retirement .
4 This result has implications for the current value of the basis .
5 This result has implications for the invariant length of a four-vector .
6 Uncertainty about the safety of the deep repository has implications for the Thorp project , which is still awaiting permission to start operations from HM Inspectorate of Pollution .
7 The ‘ Options for Change ’ Defence Review has implications for a large number of Scottish companies .
8 In focusing upon informal relationships and the sources of sociability available to old people , the research has implications for the quality of life in old age .
9 An interim report of the Higher Education Review Group for Northern Ireland ( see also 1982 Chilver ) , Chilver investigated implications for the teacher education system of falling school rolls .
10 The introduction of the internal market into the NHS has implications for the roles of and relationships between doctors and managers .
11 Local authority borrowing has implications for the Public Sector Borrowing Requirement ( PSBR ) , the rate of monetary growth , and interest rates .
12 Powerful interest groups prompt state intervention ; state intervention has implications for the nature of the interest-group world ; and each reinforces the other leading to an increasingly closed and tight pattern of interest group/state relations .
13 The span of control concept has implications for the ‘ shape ’ of an organisation .
14 These changes have implications for the location of economic activity , and , in particular , call into question the economic role of cities .
15 Such changes have implications for the demand for housing , both in terms of numbers and types of dwellings .
16 While this reform is specifically designed to prevent many of today 's disgruntled education consumers joining the ranks of tomorrow 's underclass , it will of course have implications for a much wider group of young people , whose talents and needs have been all too little met by the emphasis on the reorganization of secondary education to the exclusion of all other considerations .
17 The merging of synonyms carries implications for the effectiveness of the index in terms of precision and recall .
18 These distinctions have implications for the type of care provided , the support services required and the stresses and problems associated with caring .
19 Beyond these direct consequences such labs have implications for the long term development of the host-country 's scientific capacity and capability .
20 This kind of analysis has implications for the Marxist theory of the state .
21 Finally , we have shown that our results have implications for the evolution of human chromosome 10 and for the organisation of genes around its centromere .
22 The new findings have implications for the burial of radioactive and other toxic waste .
23 The Chernobyl disaster sent radioactive fall-out across the northern hemisphere and scientists fear that the destruction of the rain forests have implications for the world 's climate .
24 The number and types of questions likely to be posed to the system have implications for the amount of effort directed into thesaurus construction that can be justified .
25 This surprising observation has implications for the application of d 3C A to the study of DNA-protein interactions since it is possible that DNA duplexes containing this analogue may still bind proteins in the minor groove and therefore , the results from such studies need to be interpreted with care .
26 Policing in Northern Ireland is a very controversial topic in a sensitive environment , and this sensitivity has implications for the research ( on which see Brewer 1990 b ) , especially its design and location , as well as for the validity and reliability of the results .
27 The attitude of the family has implications for the style of initial assessment carried out by the psychiatrist ; if the psychiatrist realises from the outset that other agencies are involved then consent of the family for reports may be obtained at an early stage .
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