Example sentences of "argues for [art] " in BNC.

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1 It argues for a one-stage system with challenges to decisions being thought of as ‘ appeals ’ rather than ‘ reviews ’ .
2 She argues for a study of reading that would work towards political ends and ‘ replace the mysterious objectives of aesthetic satisfaction and moral enrichment . ’
3 Sir : In her article ( 'The child as a piece of disposable property' , 2 October ) , Sue Wells argues for a change in adoption law so as to bring it nearer an open adoption system , whereby adopted children remain in contact with birth parents .
4 Although the Scarman Report is often taken to be the central text which argues for a link between ‘ social conditions ’ and ‘ disorder ’ , the terms of the debate were by no means set by Scarman .
5 The London Industrial Strategy ( Greater London Council , 1985 ) highlights some of these problems , and although it argues for a positive role for local authorities , in the end it concludes that national help and assistance will be necessary in order to have any major impact .
6 The objectivity of time , space and matter expresses a fear of death , tries to capture a physical immortality for mankind , but Jones argues for a metaphor for life .
7 Millett ( 1983 ) also argues for a raised joist and plank floor .
8 Dickinson argues for a change in the organisation of the industry as chronologically earlier pairs show less variation than later examples ; this may only be a change in ability and need not relate to changes in the medium used to make models .
9 Sloman ( 1978 ) straightforwardly argues for a conscious module or sub-part view , of just the sort I have opposed to a program-level view .
10 Hayes argues for a semantics from which it follows that , once natural language is acquired , the meaning of the more primitive core concepts is altered — not merely added to .
11 On the other hand , most of the signs are peculiar to Crete and that argues for a local origin .
12 The traditional interpretation of the large buildings at the major urban centres as palaces argues for a simple pyramid society , with all the produce and services coming into the king 's administrators ' hands for redistribution .
13 Instead , she argues for a socialization theory which sees the individual as ‘ a function of what people around her expect her to be , and what the over-all situation in which she is acting implies that she is ’ ( 1973 : 395 ) .
14 Mr Barabash argues for a hefty transfer .
15 She argues for a ‘ third way ’ , and it is this ‘ third way ’ that is the subject of this chapter .
16 Whichever it was , it argues for a strategy more concerned with battles , with expeditions , with sieges , than with chevauchées to dominate the locality .
17 Along the same lines , Anne Seller in this volume argues for a more democratic epistemology .
18 More general overviews , and interpretations of recent changes in the economic geography of the UK are provided in : Unequal Growth , by Steve Fothergill and Graham Gudgin ( London , Heinemann Educational ; 1982 ) , which focuses on the urban-rural shift in manufacturing ; Spatial Divisions of Labour : Social Structures and the Geography of Production by Doreen Massey ( London and Basingstoke , Macmillan ; 1984 ) which argues for a spatial divisions of labour approach to uneven development ; and Long Waves of Regional Development by Michael Marshall ( London and Basingstoke , Macmillan ; 1987 ) which uses a long-wave perspective , but draws also on aspects of the regulationist approach , in an analysis of the last century-and-a-half of uneven development in the UK .
19 The campaign Full Employment UK argues for a four-pronged attack on the supply side that will guarantee the abolition of long-term unemployment .
20 This chapter argues for a less pessimistic approach .
21 But the respondent argues for a much more fundamental difference .
22 Intuitively , what is happening here is that the force which argues for an increase in output ( fall in prices ) from the double marginalization position in monopoly is being outweighed by a force which argues for a decrease in output ( increase in price ) from the duopoly position .
23 Alongside these forms of ‘ cognitive instrumental rationality ’ , Habermas argues for a realm of ‘ communicative rationality ’ .
24 The CBI , in its cogently argued annual report , argues for a more involved , better-funded Department of Trade and Industry doing more to help British industry .
25 The Secretary of State , with the Chancellor , argues for a less well-funded , less involved Department of Trade and Industry .
26 This argues for a local exposition of gliadin related antigens .
27 While acknowledging continuing scientific uncertainties over the existence and extent of global warming , the report argues for a number of steps to be taken as " insurance " against the consequences of climate change .
28 * The Save the Cairngorms Campaign , a coalition of environmental groups , has criticized a Scottish Office report which argues for a voluntary approach to the environmental management of the mountains .
29 Mr for the plaintiff argues for a figure of a hundred and thirty thousand pounds whereas Mr for the defendant submits that the claim is worth between a hundred and fifteen and a hundred and twenty thousand .
30 WAR CLOUDS OVER EUROPE read the banner headlines at the opening of Reed 's earlier film , Bank Holiday ( 1938 ) , a picture whose setting suggests escapism but whose narrative argues for the need to face up to the dark side of life in order to find meaningful happiness .
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