Example sentences of "in the [adj] chapter [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 In the final chapter we shall return to consider those questions .
2 In the final chapter I give a summary .
3 In the preceding chapters we saw that there are wide differences between the three major social science theories of power These approaches to the analysis of power in capitalist society operate with distinct methodological and substantive focuses Each of the theories can be differentiated in terms of the phenomena they study in order to locate power ; by their disagreement over where ‘ politics ’ begins and ends in society ; how their respective theories are to be substantiated and invalidated ; and the degree of freedom possessed by individuals in capitalism to shape and change their societies
4 In the present chapter we shall consider mainly the relations between producers and institutions , and only in that context the question of direct formations .
5 In the present chapter we consider some of the main issues of policy and strategy which the Leeds approach raises : the way PNP policy was formulated and communicated ; the substance and interpretation of the policy ; and the LEA 's own strategies for implementing the policy — as opposed to those adopted in the schools which have been considered in previous chapters — with particular reference to the INSET programme .
6 In the present chapter we consider aspects of the LEA-based strategies in greater detail .
7 In the present chapter we shall consider terms other than exemption clauses .
8 In the present Chapter I have written of movements in theory in the present tense , whereas what is ideally required is something grammatically subtler — perhaps there are languages where it exists — like a special tense in which the present extends back to include actions or events that are already in the recent past .
9 In the following chapters we shall first look at some of the issues that all bereaved people need to talk about , whether it is with a friend or with the professional worker who specializes in meeting bereaved people .
10 In the following chapters we discuss possible ways of reducing the number of word strings .
11 In the following chapters I will attempt to do this , wherever possible .
12 In the following chapters I will look at different methods of applying other sources of knowledge to constrain the search .
13 In the following chapter we shall encounter another : the recovery of an atomic theory of matter , which played a significant role in the mechanization of nature .
14 In the following chapter we will examine several aspects of their lives and attitudes , some of which are often loosely grouped by historians as " popular culture " .
15 In the following chapter I will prepare the way for an analysis of that kind and in Chapter 11 I will propose an account of theory change in physics that does not hinge on the judgements of individuals or groups .
16 In the following chapter you will find some practical ways of helping this process still further .
17 But first , in looking at the history of classical principles in the previous chapters I have left loose ends untied and contradictions unresolved .
18 In the previous chapter we saw how anthropology was sometimes used by them to show the historical particularity of institutions which under capitalism were represented as eternal .
19 In the previous chapter we looked at crime and criminality in a very broad and general manner .
20 In the previous chapter we examined the strand of thinking and policy development that is centred on co-ordination .
21 In the previous chapter we identified the major variables which influence the current account of the balance of payments and examined how automatic and discretionary adjustments operate to rectify payments imbalances .
22 In the previous chapter we saw that there were social class differences in mortality and morbidity among the older age groups .
23 In the previous chapter we discussed some of the factors which might be involved in the identification of written and spoken words .
24 In the previous chapter we discussed the ways in which local government has changed its approach to planning .
25 As in the previous chapter we shall at this stage keep the discussion fairly general , leaving more precise discussion to later chapters , in which we consider tests of rational expectations in specific contexts .
26 In the previous chapter we have defined this relative price term as the current price in the local market relative to the expected current average price across all markets .
27 In the previous chapter we listed the five principal areas of choice for any graph search mechanism .
28 In the previous chapter we saw , on purely statistical grounds , that any particular large mutation is inherently less probable than any particular small mutation .
29 In the previous chapter it was pointed out that testimony in cattle-stealing cases was particularly prone to stereotyped ritual delivery .
30 In the previous chapter it was emphasised that the authorities deliberately promoted and condoned violence , crime and racketeering in order to alienate both terrorist and legitimate political opponents of the government from their natural sympathisers .
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