Example sentences of "we will examine " in BNC.

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1 We will examine ways in which the uniform scope of regulation could be eased to safeguard traditional local products or practices .
2 We will examine whether certain regulations affecting individual citizens within their own homes could be made advisory , rather than mandatory .
3 In addition we will examine ways of giving those who retire with lump sum payments more choice as to how their savings are invested .
4 But we will examine ways of introducing further protection for the police .
5 In this chapter we will examine various explanations of why most soil conservation policies do not work .
6 The two most important episodes in public order policing during this period were the CND campaign against cruise missiles in the first half of the decade , and the miners ' strike during 1984/5 ; we will examine each of these in turn .
7 The phrase ‘ can be followed by ’ indicates that not all crime does actually result in police action and prosecution , an issue we will examine in more detail in a discussion of criminal statistics ( Chapter 4 ) .
8 We will examine the history of delinquency in an attempt to correct the notion , or perhaps myth , that such behaviour is a uniquely modern phenomenon that indicates a degeneration of standards of behaviour in present-day society .
9 In Chapter 4 we will examine the statistics on crime .
10 We will examine and discuss each of these patterns in this chapter , and in doing so will aim to look behind the picture of crime and criminals provided by criminal statistics .
11 The issue we will examine is why delinquency is so attractive to some and unappealing to other youth .
12 Here we will examine the supposition — supported by statistics on sex differences in crime — that crime is characteristically a male activity .
13 In the next chapter we will examine in greater detail the statistics on crime .
14 In this chapter we will examine what these statistics show and discuss the extent to which they provide an accurate picture of the range and extent of criminal behaviour .
15 We will consider , firstly , the question of omission ; then we will examine the issues concerned with bias in the statistics ; and thirdly we will look at attempts to overcome some of the problems with the official criminal statistics .
16 One of the arguments we will examine below is the view that the police use this discretion , this freedom to decide when to proceed and when not to , to favour ‘ respectable ’ and middle-class individuals rather than working-class individuals .
17 A number of factors need to be taken into account here , and we will examine some of them below .
18 In the last section of this chapter we will examine the attempts that have been made to find out more about the actual extent of crime , and to provide some sort of indication of the ‘ dark figure ’ of crime and to discover the ‘ real ’ rather than the recorded rate and character of crime .
19 We will examine its financial aims and objectives , how they impact on the finance function , some of the problems of implementation , and whether they are consistent with the changes already in hand .
20 Gagné ( 1970 ) — whose work we will examine later — has compiled a hierarchy of eight types , the purpose of which is to help the teacher to match her teaching to the kind of learning she wishes to produce .
21 Later in this chapter we will examine the gradual growth of government concern to assume a closer control of the process .
22 In later chapters ( such as chapter six ) we will examine doubts like these in depth to see how they arise and how they can be resolved .
23 These are the questions we will examine and that is our goal — to let God be God .
24 We will examine each of these misconceptions in turn , so that once we have torn away these layers of misunderstanding we can get to the kernel of doubt and see not only its dangers but its value .
25 In this chapter we will examine a third misconception about doubt — the idea that doubt is something to be ashamed of because it is dishonest to believe if you have doubts .
26 Even Robert Bakker , a paleontologist now at Colorado University and one of the most original and interesting of dinosaur academics , has not , I suggest , given the subject of dinosaur size as much attention as it deserves , and consequently many of his arguments concerning metabolism , which we will examine in the next chapter , remain fatally flawed .
27 In general , we will examine problems having p linear objective functions , , which we wish to maximise subject to linear constraints .
28 More detailed description of the approach has been set out by Savage , Evans and Savage ( 1981 ) and an evaluation of its effectiveness within a Total Communication programme in the UK is provided , which we will examine in the context of all the systems .
29 Finally , we will examine pragmatism which , particularly under the inspiration of C. S. Pierce , William James , and John Dewey , was very influential in the United States around the turn of the century .
30 In the remainder of this section we will examine the following issues : which bodies are subject to judicial review ; what sorts of decision are subject to judicial review ; who can apply to have a decision judicially reviewed ; what remedies are available to an applicant for judicial review ; and the procedures for seeking judicial review .
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