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"institutionally" Definitions
  1. as part of the normal systems, practices, etc. of an organization, society or culture
  2. in or by an institution (= a large organization such as a hospital, university, prison, etc.)

309 Sentences With "institutionally"

How to use institutionally in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "institutionally" and check conjugation/comparative form for "institutionally". Mastering all the usages of "institutionally" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And the party, institutionally speaking, is united against climate action.
Institutionally, this integration drive cannot stop at the finance ministry.
The lasting effect of these unforced errors is institutionally crippling.
When this will happen is unclear: British politics is institutionally conservative.
I understand individual decisions, but when this happens institutionally, it hurts.
This has left the party institutionally prepared for foreign policy fights.
The GOP steadfastly opposes the policy, both institutionally and almost unanimously.
The GOP is institutionally opposed to raising revenue, particularly from the wealthy.
Chile would seem to have had the steepest fall, at least institutionally.
Partly because, institutionally speaking, they lack the GOP's willingness to hijack procedures.
"This is an issue that, institutionally, Yale's not prepared for," he said.
On the other hand, institutionally focused financial markets are still quite inefficient.
It's not that the league is institutionally or constitutionally immoral, or amoral.
I prefer that to the latest illustration of an institutionally approved theory.
But Congress should be asserting itself institutionally, not simply limiting the presidency.
Compare that to apartments, where more than half are now institutionally-owned.
"Institutionally, in the States the Muslim community is fairly young," says Imam Latif.
I have always had great respect for Comey personally, and the FBI institutionally.
It's a socially, historically, and institutionally bred behavior that embeds in the psyche.
But its legacy is most alive, institutionally, through Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.
The omission was surprising because the NYT is institutionally committed to climate coverage.
"Institutionally the police are coming at it from a paternalistic place," he told VICE.
Eventually, the church will ordain women if that's the only way to survive institutionally.
As a result, we are institutionally opposed to the death penalty in all cases.
So far, Mepkin has shunned all forms of social media — both individually and institutionally.
It's a distinction between journalists who are institutionally wedded and those who are not.
The legislature is also more institutionally disposed to deliberation than a single officer is.
"Every day they are being institutionally reminded that they are a minority," he added.
Ukraine's challenge today lies in to what degree they can institutionally embrace their own diversity.
Most are institutionally innovative, having in recent years either reinvented themselves or emerged from nowhere.
One take is that the party failed to decide because it was too weak institutionally.
"I, institutionally, and Jeffrey Uslip, as curator, apologize for shutting down the conversation," she said.
When Luciana Berger joined the breakaway TIG, she declared that Labour was institutionally anti-Semitic.
But without a shove from politicians, they may be too institutionally conservative to do so.
Unfortunately, it kind of highlights how tragic it is that Obama didn't change anything institutionally.
Jamie Dimon has put his own money where his mouth, institutionally speaking, has long been.
Chatman — a statement, I believe, that this case was not only doctrinally but institutionally important.
It is institutionally suspicious — if not allergic — to the we-need-scale arguments of "champions".
A difficulty is that queer, and to some extent trans, are hard to capture, institutionally.
The US government goes along with this, he implies, because it is institutionally anti-Semitic.
It's that institutionally, you do get rewarded for big, juicy stories that make something happen.
The difficulty is that queer, and to some extent trans, are hard to capture, institutionally.
For many years, he was institutionally embattled, at least partly because of his left-wing politics.
The Republican Party, institutionally, is supporting Trump and expects its elected officials to do the same.
Those of us who follow this were hoping he would reform it institutionally, but he didn't.
But, instinctually himself and institutionally within the Russian system, Putin also knew what he was doing.
We need to get clearer, institutionally, about what our criteria are for rationing long-odds surgery.
The Republican base, however, may not be thinking strategically, and they are certainly not thinking institutionally.
Under both parties, the presidency has grown institutionally narcissistic while the legislature has become constitutionally oblivious.
But the Senate seems to be institutionally empowered to better withstand short-term pressure from Trump.
STEFANIK: I do think institutionally Congress benefits from having a churn of new members and new ideas.
Institutionally, as many commentators have noted, democratic revival will not be possible without first reinforcing democratic norms.
But the main problem is that institutionally, banks are not wired to drive this kind of innovation.
Luciana Berger, a Jewish lawmaker who has faced abuse, said the party had become "institutionally anti-Semitic".
Schumer and Trump are locked in battle institutionally, which limits the cooperation needed to get local projects.
Trump is, on his own, neither competent enough nor institutionally powerful enough to fatally undermine American democracy.
There are more blogs that have taken it on, but it's not institutionally part of the business.
And it has worked in recent years to support smaller and less institutionally recognized organizations and artists.
So we did see -- we are seeing elevated inflows from what we saw institutionally in the fourth quarter.
And so I think, institutionally, there&aposs a huge amount of reluctance to give Congress what it wants.
The goal of humankind is not to just live "off-planet" but to succeed – socially, institutionally, and financially.
Institutionally, Democrats worry that elevating Warren to VP will cost the party a Senate seat, where Kaine won't.
These are points Clinton won't hesitate to raise but that the Republican Party is institutionally incapable of making.
The Fed appears to be institutionally incapable of grappling with the challenges posed by a low-rate world.
These are points Democrats won't hesitate to raise but that the Republican Party is institutionally incapable of making.
FISCAL DISCIPLINE YIELDS MODEST SURPLUSES Fitch considers British Columbia's financial planning and controls to be strong and institutionally embedded.
This is where scientists can lose in a really wholesale way, as they're institutionally shut out of the process.
But a department with institutionally independent leadership need not be hermetically isolated from engaging assistance from local line prosecutors.
There is literally nothing institutionally to prevent them from going to the mat for something like Palestinian human rights.
Sir David Dalton, head of Salford Royal hospital, says such practices reflect the NHS's "institutionally low tolerance to risk".
" She added: "New York State has to get its act together and do something institutionally to head off corruption.
But her core insight into how even mediocrities can be institutionally benumbed and conscripted into heinous projects remains fertile.
They are institutionally neutral, and the Intelligence Community has developed an array of institutional "methods" to support that neutrality.
Hilma af Klint reminds us that institutionally approved narratives generally function as touchstones for conformists and the weak-kneed.
Again all of this institutionally-sanctioned behavior, which the leaders of Gilead would happily support, appears to be official policy.
Ms Berger, who is Jewish herself, said she had come to the "sickening conclusion" that Labour was institutionally anti-Semitic.
There's nothing, institutionally speaking, stopping Ryan or McCain from withdrawing his endorsement of Trump after he refused to endorse them.
While taking a strong stance on security and defense, Trump needs deploy American soft power institutionally in his foreign policy.
Courts have generally held that administrative agencies are the more constitutionally appropriate and institutionally competent bodies to address such harms.
The truth has now been powerfully revealed about the integrity and probity of Mueller personally and the Mueller investigation institutionally.
We make less money than men, we live longer, and we have institutionally been denied 'the keys to the castle.
CNN has made little doubt how it institutionally views the Trump administration, and Acosta revels in being a leading antagonist.
"We have a little more of a scrappy start up that is not institutionally related at all," Valentine told Hyperallergic.
Mr. Neal, an institutionally minded western Massachusetts Democrat, wants to make serious policy pushes in almost all of those areas.
What follows is far harsher, an artfully staggered, increasingly harrowing depiction of the institutionally sanctioned forms of humiliation and subjugation.
The integrated global economy gives enormous power advantages to institutionally sound governments in the United States and the European Union.
An apartheid state legally and institutionally privileging the colonizers in historic Palestine defies international law, ethical principles and common sense.
"I cannot say the crisis is over but this will open the way to put things in place institutionally," he said.
Chicago, and the rest of the country was afflicted by segregation, which rendered upward mobility institutionally impossible for most black Americans.
It is also an institutionally weak country suffering from poor intelligence and security coordination in the fight against a sophisticated enemy.
If the chief justice does not produce the desired progressive outcome, the Roberts court will find itself attacked as institutionally illegitimate.
"Institutionally, we are not here for a lesson in civics," Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas Cowboys, said in December.
Any organization with a focus on equity and inclusion will have to embody these qualities — both institutionally and in its leaders.
It left me believing there is a level of frustration bordering on anger that would be institutionally reckless not to address.
I work in a brick-and-mortar university, one of the most institutionally conservative workplaces in the world outside North Korea.
But institutionally, the people who are supposed to keep him in check in a case like that are members of Congress.
Father of Lies stands out among Evenson's work as the most institutionally critical, morally unsettling of the books in this collection. 2.
"The Democrats are in something of a box here, because institutionally, they can't take no for an answer," Bowman told VICE News.
Institutionally-backed segregation and employing different standards based on one's membership within a group is cancerous and must be excised from society.
As recently as last year, the Met police chief was quoted suggesting British society, and not just the police, is institutionally racist.
BRAINARD: AS YOU KNOW, THE FEDERAL RESERVE INSTITUTIONALLY HAS A VERY STRONG SET OF MANDATES THAT ARE GIVEN TO US BY CONGRESS.
Positive reforms at the supranational level are another story, especially in an era when neoliberalism is so deeply entrenched ideologically and institutionally.
Academics, both individually and institutionally, should demonstrate their moral commitment to climate action by lowering the carbon footprint of their professional activities.
Despite the many museums that cling to disproven narratives, art no longer adheres to institutionally approved styles or a supposedly shared history.
"You know, the N.R.A. used to be very big supporters of mine, institutionally; they are not so much anymore," Mr. Toomey said.
Or, the problem could be that deciding when to release prisoners just isn't what BOP and DOJ are institutionally designed to do.
The Economist: What ought humans do to prepare mentally, institutionally and otherwise, for the potential contact with other life forms in the universe?
American parties have always been institutionally weak by comparative standards, because the two-party system forces parties to be large big-tent coalitions.
"There's a thousand ways in which, for example, the Senate Intelligence Committee investigation depends on cooperation institutionally from the intelligence community," Wittes says.
In the second case of the media, however, Street Art came to be used as a term for institutionally authorized, legally sanctioned murals.
After all, some of those big, abstract ideas that started among small groups of outsiders have become established institutionally, at least as aspirations.
"There's a thousand ways in which, for example, the Senate Intelligence Committee investigation depends on cooperation institutionally from the intelligence community, " Wittes says.
By naming and advocating for her own rights as an uncoupled woman, Hopper calls for recognition for relationships that are not institutionally sanctioned.
"This Conservative government…seems to not be very conservative, fiscally or institutionally," noted Ryan Shorthouse of Bright Blue, a liberal Tory think-tank.
Now, however, regional analysts say protests are more significant than before, revealing a loss of faith in the ability to enact change institutionally.
For many programs, changing leagues "put them in one of the Power 5 conferences, which protected them both politically and institutionally," Tranghese said.
Any senators — who institutionally prize their independence and the separation of powers — would likely recoil from a presidential attempt to depose their leader.
"I cannot remain in a party that I have come to the sickening conclusion is institutionally anti-Semitic," Ms. Berger said on Monday.
It is not surprising at all either that Trump would be skeptical of intelligence agencies that seem to of been institutionally mounted against him.
Compared with previous decades, the average peacekeeper now comes from a country that is not just poorer but also less democratic and institutionally underdeveloped.
S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer questioned whether the WTO is institutionally capable of handling China's blend of state capitalism and weak rule of law.
You can see this happening institutionally, globally... It's all the same story of a gender identity that doesn't exist except by putting down somebody.
"This quarter validates us institutionally," Mr. Fink said, making the point that BlackRock could attract money even when investors are in a jittery mood.
I don't see Google unleashing campaigns like that — either because it lacks confidence in the product or because institutionally it just doesn't want to.
After all, governments in institutionally weak countries like Mexico, or undemocratic countries like China, tend to stay in power by lifting national living standards.
"I cannot remain in a party that I have come to the sickening conclusion is institutionally anti-Semitic," said Ms. Berger, who is Jewish.
America's political establishment is riven; Japan's politicians are too timid to confront lobbies; and the euro area seems institutionally incapable of uniting around new policies.
Third, how do we institutionally ensure that any anomalies are randomly distributed and do not disadvantage any subset of the electorate more than any other?
"The Gutierrez case shows the degree to which the pursuit and administration of justice has deteriorated morally and institutionally in Mexico," Corral said on Twitter.
"[Comey feels] institutionally he has to push back on this," CNN's source said, citing the magnitude of Trump's accusations and Comey's certainty they are untrue.
"It&aposs just institutionally harmful," Rachel VanLandingham, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and former judge advocate, told The New York Times after the pardons.
In Vietnam, there are only a few forms art can take to be supported financially or institutionally, or to be granted display by government censors.
As I walked through the galleries, I feared that all levels were being equalized — curatorially and institutionally — under this category of figuration with political content.
While institutionally affiliated resources, such as endowments and museum collections, are embedded with notions of permanence, neither functions in such a solid or immobile form.
"It's just institutionally harmful," said Rachel VanLandingham, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and former judge advocate who now teaches law at Southwestern Law School.
She herself did not always understand what they were about, which is a welcome measure in an age of explanation, justification, and institutionally approved content.
By writing herself out of art history, af Klint reminds us that institutionally approved narratives generally function as touchstones for conformists and the weak-kneed.
The source said Comey felt "institutionally he has to push back on this" because the magnitude of the allegations that Comey knows not to be true.
Any team that wishes to unseat them must, aside from having the talent to match up, be institutionally sound enough to knock them off their path.
At times, after exhibitions, the group made a bonfire of their work, an act that attacked the notion of art itself as an institutionally approved commodity.
Democrats have had the narrative mostly their way so far since institutionally they get to call the shots, leaving the administration no choice but to respond.
"He was trying to convey that although the House can turn things around like that, the Senate just institutionally, by workload, cannot do as quickly," Sen.
Trump makes rare trip to Clinton state, hoping to win back New Hampshire MORE (Ariz.) — will start thinking about the longer-term and acting institutionally again?
These power grabs highlight one of the most disturbing facts about American politics today: The Republican Party has become institutionally indifferent to the health of democracy.
There's a natural discomfort when detached celebrities, far removed from the struggles, air the dirty laundry of a community constantly under attack rhetorically, institutionally or violently.
This type of leadership is crucial for many young people of color aspiring to make a mark in a field that has historically institutionally excluded them.
She's locked in a bitter Democratic primary with a challenger who's temperamentally and institutionally capable of going to war with the party if he feels ill-treated.
Lauren Halsey, a young artist who recently opened a site-specific installation at MOCA, echoed Pittman's sentiments about Molesworth's commitment to artists, especially those institutionally under-recognized.
I think there are definitely a few that don't agree with it, but more so it's institutionally that they don't agree with it — and that's the problem.
For 21700years the gem-like TCM was the only alternative to the more conservative, institutionally top heavy Honolulu Academy of Art, as the HMoA was then known.
I believe this country is institutionally racist, and that the violence we see between the police and the black community is one symptom of this painful fact.
Like Hallquist growing up, few trans Americans have had someone to look to in their lives who is both transgender and accomplished in an institutionally recognized way.
While we have a wealth of literature regarding depression in adults, institutionally produced and self-produced, there is seemingly a dearth of dedicated literature relating to children.
In Canada, the legality of running a Tor node is essentially untested, making the high profile, institutionally-backed node at Western a potential target for the feds.
We're going to have to communicate to the world more of what we do, which we've done institutionally, but also, there's a personal element to it too.
Institutionally, this has meant, among other things, that they developed testing capacity for new viruses as well as hospitals' ability to handle patients with novel respiratory pathogens.
"We thought for years that something should be done institutionally, and finally we said, why don't we just do it," said Andy McCord, one of group's founders.
Lori and Mossimo Giannulli's attorneys, along with other defendants, have argued USC institutionally gives preference to so-called "side door" applicants -- people with money, power and influence.
This requires a quality of seeing and thinking that many institutionally ensconced white theorists have downgraded and even gone so far as to declare bourgeois and obsolete.
The NAWSA had to remain institutionally focused on securing constitutional female suffrage until it was a done deal, ceding first mover advantage to the parties' women's organizations.
So what we now have is try to get a balance between presidents being allowed to pick their own team, but the team broadly being institutionally focused.
The courts are institutionally in the best position to handle sentence reductions on a large scale, and there is authority for them to do it under current law.
To increase the amount of women in tech, we need to think both short term and long term, and break down the walls that institutionally keep women out.
"During this referendum, I don't think you could point to a distinguished expert, institutionally or personally, who said Brexit would work out fine for the UK," said Drezner.
"I feel as a responsibility institutionally as the Speaker of the House that I should not be leading some chasm in the middle of our party," he added.
The mechanisms are not the same, of course, and the United States is institutionally pluralistic in a way that limits the repressive power of the state over scientists.
The formal process of converting these collections into archived, institutionally accessible anthologies has created some of the most important compendiums of gay archival material available in America today.
Racism, sexism, homophobia, and classism intersect at all points, creating an intricate web of institutionally-enforced oppression that shapes the way that marginalized people navigate their daily lives.
This is more than an installation about the institutionally sanctioned killing of black people in the US; it's about how we see and frame and understand that reality.
The position Comey has put himself in isn't fun or institutionally safe: Already, the Clinton campaign is demanding Comey release everything he has, rather than just this vague letter.
A source told CNN that Comey felt "institutionally he has to push back on this" because of the magnitude of the allegations that Comey knows not to be true.
In particular, we pressed him on how humanity might need to prepare mentally and institutionally for contact with extraterrestrial life forms (a reframing of liberalism on a galactic scale).
It has been hard work because many of these churches are institutionally weak and beholden to geopolitics; some barely survived communism and others form tiny minorities in Muslim lands.
In addition to challenging the western canon, Miriam, Joyce and the P&D movement as a whole offered a model of how artists can address inequity aesthetically and institutionally.
Institutionally, it's often the OMB director who's pushing to cut government spending, since he or she has an incentive to keep down the deficit level in the overall budget.
Further, the recital format situates an artist as an optical subject for particular class and demographic of people who are patrons of institutionally issued culture, never producers of culture.
More than a third of our budget is dedicated to financial aid and we institutionally award five times the financial aid of the federal government, even when including loans.
The frequently heard dismissive recommendation to "suck it up" in the face of workplace indignities is inconsistent with the overwhelming evidence of just how institutionally damaging such behavior is.
Google cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin were still involved with the company, and pursued moonshot bets that are today backed institutionally by the organization&aposs parent company, Alphabet.
Sondra Perry's solo show at the Kitchen is more than an installation about the institutionally sanctioned killing of black people; it's about how we frame and understand that reality.
Harris said black Americans have been "institutionally and historically deprived legally from having access," to the greatest source of assets and wealth that a family can have, which is housing.
Trump arose because the Republican Party was institutionally too strong for too long, which made it too easy for elites to decide among themselves and take their voters for granted.
As we're seeing this week, breaking the cycle would require Clinton to do things she's unwilling to do, and the press to do things it is institutionally incapable of doing.
I wonder if it is possible for black Americans and white Americans to really see the same thing when they look at the creations of institutionally minted "modern" black artists.
Art museums act as a container for objects that are institutionally ranked as higher on the hierarchy, that are special, and that are important to a culture and time period.
Living Hope Ministries, based in Arlington, Texas, denies that it promotes conversion therapy, an institutionally denounced practice in which a usually religious group tries to "correct" an individual's same-sex attraction.
In a statement sent to Reuters on Wednesday, the company said it would "do everything we can technologically and institutionally to prevent crime," adding that it uses technology to improve efficiency.
An ode to black resilience in the face not just of institutionally racist police forces but also crippling self-doubt, it would become an anthem of the Black Lives Matter movement.
And having spent much of his career in Westminster bashing Brussels, William Hague attracted Eurosceptic accusations that he had "gone native" during his four years at the (institutionally Europhile) Foreign Office.
But broader questions about how abuse can be institutionally fostered has been a painful source of reckoning within many Catholic organizations in light of ongoing investigations into sexual abuse by priests.
As we examined the scope and impact of harassment and abuse in our government offices, the conclusion was that institutionally, they were prepared to respond to individual incidents until they happened.
Young workers are institutionally discriminated against, not entitled to the full minimum wage not entitled to equal rates of housing benefit and so many are now saddled with huge student debts.
When it comes to food, this means that factors like "conservation agriculture, improved livestock management, increasing irrigation efficiency, agroforestry and management of food loss and waste" will have to be institutionally regulated.
One museum project that seeks to institutionally document trans histories and micro-histories is the museum's ever expanding Trans Hirstory in 99 Objects collection, currently on view at the Henry Art Gallery.
I am still a few years shy of the target demographic for this fever dream of an institutionally mediated day of political judgment, but I can feel the attraction and the pull.
British Jewish groups have accused Labour of becoming institutionally anti-Semitic, and the issue has played a part in Labour's failure to take electoral advantage of the Conservative government's turmoil over Brexit.
The Court's ruling in Rucho reveals that there's a threat to American democracy more subtle and yet greater than the Trump presidency: the Republican Party's drift toward being institutionally hostile to democracy.
Trump could do serious damage to the system, maybe even induce a constitutional crisis, but he is, on his own, neither competent enough nor institutionally powerful enough to outright destroy American democracy.
These gaps follow predictable patterns: Low-income communities of color that are the most beleaguered by violence and systematic disinvestment are also financially and institutionally under-resourced to cope with parental death.
Scholars often treat the institutional reforms of the mid-1970s as enabling the transformation of the institutionally decentralized, ideologically incoherent, and interest-governed Democrats into a more unified, nationalized, liberal-dominated party.
British Jewish groups have accused Labour of becoming institutionally anti-Semitic and the issue has played a part in its failure to take electoral advantage of the Conservative government's turmoil over Brexit.
The reality is that one of the US's two major political parties is institutionally committed at nearly every level to the same basic agenda of environmental deregulation and inaction on carbon emissions.
Normally the USTR's office is bureaucratically powerful despite its small size (this is symbolized by its physical location right by the White House) and institutionally biased in favor of making trade deals.
But such geo-engineering may be "economically, socially and institutionally infeasible," according to a draft obtained by Reuters covering hundreds of pages on risks of droughts, floods, heat waves and more powerful storms.
Institutionally there were two or three of our – SORKIN: But when you look at this quarter, from what you can already see – FINK: We're not seeing -- we're not seeing much change in attitude.
"Most institutionally minded crypto firms want to buy proper insurance, and in many cases, getting adequate insurance coverage is a regulatory or legal requirement," said Henri Arslanian, PwC fintech & crypto leader for Asia.
In the midst of the mostly grossly worded slew of insults that the institutionally rich lobbed at the bitcoin crowd over the weekend, Bill Gates may have landed the furthest from the mark.
Another rationale for the new council is that it will serve as a check on the Office of the US Trade Representative, which is institutionally inclined to make and pass new trade deals.
In summary I think that we are basically seeing a process in Brazil which we were at the end of the day leave the country in a much stronger and better shape institutionally.
"If we have a further slowdown, it will have to be combined more with the fiscal policy, and the world just isn't ready for that, institutionally, politically and any other way," he said.
Asperger's was added as a distinct condition within the spectrum in 1994, but has now disappeared, having been merged into A.S.D. The DSM not only defines the condition; it makes it institutionally consequential.
When Berger said that she had come to the "sickening conclusion" that the Labour Party was "institutionally anti-Semitic," she ripped open a conflict that is tearing the UK's main opposition party apart.
By contrast, Arceneaux's adaptation of the performance is not an exercise in nostalgia, much less an institutionally sanctioned piece of political pageantry, but an examination of race and politics in our current moment.
Paper is Dropbox's latest attempt to court businesses away from Microsoft and Google, or at the very least to encourage companies to pay for Dropbox services on top of what they already use institutionally.
"We are basically seeing a process in Brazil, which we at the end of the day will leave the country in a much stronger and better shape institutionally — and that is important," he said.
He implies that he considered himself the product of this vast prisonlike complex, and the show pushes his reasoning further to suggest that the cultural impulse to violence is institutionally inculcated, nurtured and encouraged.
At least by being honest about the disgraceful state of diversity in the film industry, steps can be taken to institutionally create space for those who've been systemically sidelined, so #OscarsSoWhite doesn't happen again.
"If all you do is take the easy way out and be silent on things that you feel strongly about institutionally, then you're not really doing your job as a U.S. senator," Tillis said.
So institutionally, I had concerns -- and I continue to have concerns -- around trying to create these very neat buckets where you just carve out narrow slivers of FDA's existing jurisdiction to suit some political goal.
"I cannot remain in a party that I have today come to the sickening conclusion is institutionally anti-Semitic," Labour MP Luciana Berger said at a February 18 press conference explaining her decision to leave.
The other thing that struck me about Gross's work is that she has never developed a signature style and that her works on paper constitute a major accomplishment that has yet to be institutionally recognized.
Electing a majority gets you the party, and as long as the overwhelming bulk of the institutional and financial incentives incline the party against climate and clean energy, the party will, institutionally speaking, oppose them.
What matters is not just that authoritarians' influence within the party is rising, but when it is happening: at a moment when the party is institutionally far weaker than it has been in the past.
As the author of a book that offers pragmatic guidance on how to develop institutionally sound and trans-inclusive administrative policies, I offer three approaches for organizations to consider as they navigate this new terrain.
"While many doubted, the tZERO team worked hard to be at the tip of the spear in creating and launching credible, capable and institutionally scalable blockchain technologies for crypto assets," Byrne said in a release.
" Just so you understand where the U.S.G.A. is coming from institutionally, Davis also said that "we kind of joke internally that if we get all compliments from the players, we have probably done something wrong.
In the mid 1980s, major cities like New York, Los Angeles, and Boston began to institutionally implement broken windows policing by prosecuting crimes such as public urination or intoxication as criminal rather than civil offenses.
These laws, which did everything from restricting the jobs black people could hold to limiting where they could live, structurally and institutionally supported the K.K.K.'s efforts to cripple African-Americans attempts to just live.
Since then, Paul has embarked on a redemption tour that more or less allowed him to continue business as usual on the video platform, and with YouTube's latest decision, that redemption arc now seems institutionally endorsed.
McClintock then leaned on one of conservatives' favorite talking points when it comes to legislation that would dare increase the ability of tribes to institutionally combat violence against women: that of the mistakenly charged sex offender.
"The failure of the Labour Party to deal consistently and effectively with anti-Semitic incidents in recent years risks lending force to allegations that elements of the Labour movement are institutionally anti-Semitic," the report said.
Comey has no plans to resign in protest over Trump's latest accusation, a source told CNN, adding that Comey felt "institutionally he has to push back on this" and was prepared to be fired for it.
"I can't institutionally believe that experience is that important, or else I would have a hard time reconciling myself and the company," the social network's co-founder and CEO said in a recent interview with Y Combinator.
"This is the first digital gold product that is institutionally targeted - and the first to work with a government entity - to be currently in a live testing state," said Sandra Ro, head of digitization at CME Group.
Focusing on this definition of diversity overlooks centuries of institutionally sanctioned oppression and discrimination, forces that kept minority groups from ever breaking into the boardroom, says Isaac Sabat, assistant professor of psychology at Texas A&M University.
In the past, protests on both campuses have called attention to the need for more education and prevention programs, more streamlined adjudication processes, and a deeper understanding of the most effective way to respond to incidents institutionally.
And many of today's agents came up in the bureau during the 1990s, an era of special prosecutors and mutual distrust between the Clinton White House and the F.B.I. Institutionally, though, the F.B.I. prides itself on nonpartisanship.
Bernie collection, spring 2017), the widely documented and institutionally sanctioned murder of innocent people of color by police (Ota, Meet Saartjie, spring 2016), depression and the various pharmaceutical and chemical responses to it (Double Bind, fall 2016).
So now we have an administration in which both paleoconservatism and neoconservatism are sidelined, and straight-up hawkishness is institutionally ascendant as it has rarely been in modern presidencies — save in the Peak Cheneyism following 9/11.
Instead, the campaign's senior personnel were either (like Podesta and Palmieri) less tied to her personally than to the Democratic Party institutionally or else (like Sullivan) relative newcomers to Clintonworld who'd done well at the State Department.
And should their governments continue to bury their heads in the sand, citizens of Western states need to hear the victims' stories, and be made aware that the same entity pretending to seek peace institutionally perpetuates violence.
"Tokyo District Court is probably one of the most institutionally conservative courts in the system, so it is a court that is very likely to be government/large company-friendly in this sort of case," he added.
Teams that changed leagues to stay in a power conference "made a decision to get themselves protected politically, financially and institutionally," said Mike Tranghese, a former Big East commissioner, who now advises the SEC on men's basketball.
The press isn't institutionally equipped to cover a campaign between one essentially normal candidate and one who is, by bipartisan admission, unfit for the presidency, so they will contrive a kind of parity between Trump and Hillary Clinton.
In today's installment: A final look at the money-making movie titans of 2018; Coachella announces its headliners for 2019; and a reminder that Hollywood is still an institutionally corrupt patriarchy struggling to keep up with the times!
This is because on top of bringing strong analytics, a focus on performance, and a willingness to break agency crockery, the Office of Management and Budget is institutionally charged with advancing the major policy priorities of the president.
"She said that unlike her own party, the Labour party is "institutionally antisemitic," adding that "there is no piece of evidence, no policy you can point to which shows that the Conservatives treat Muslims in a similar fashion.
But USIP, which Congress created as an independent, non-partisan institute, goes beyond what agencies such as the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) legally and institutionally can do to advance peace and stability.
Last month saw the 25th anniversary of the murder of black teenager Stephen Lawrence by white racists which led to London's police force being labeled institutionally racist by an inquiry due to its botched handling of the case.
There are several that come close, such as institutionally sponsored fellowships and workshops that train educational staff to imagine new ways to serve diverse audiences, build advocacy infrastructure, and engage people of color in leadership and skills training.
While, speaking for me and likely many others, exchange-based products aren't easier to me, it does appeal to more institutionally minded individuals or companies for whom holding an account with an exchange or a crypto wallet isn't feasible.
Ms. Keane, who received funds from the Arts Council to make specific works for exhibitions, is "a forerunner of multimedia art but very much an artist who shows institutionally and not in a commercial context," Ms. Stella-Sawicka said.
Labour said in a statement in response to the claims that the party is not institutionally anti-Semitic, the complaints relate to a small minority of members, and that the processes to deal with such allegations have now improved.
While institutionally sponsored events, such as the recent discussion on "Open Casket" held at the Whitney with the Racial Imaginary Institute on April 9, may appear to show an appetite for dialogue, we have been here and had this conversation before.
A president completed two terms, power was handed over to another president, young people became institutionally invested in politics and advocacy, a minority became president, popular protests became culture, and a ruling party peacefully handed over to the opposition party.
Mrs May's time running the Home Office, a department institutionally obsessed with order and control, earned her a reputation for inscrutability, formality and obsession with detail ("she was always asking for more papers in her red box," says one lieutenant).
" Grove points to another theory, promoted by Clinton confidant Sidney Blumenthal, that the Times "has long been trying to redeem itself with Clinton scandal coverage after the institutionally traumatizing humiliation of being beaten by the Post on the Watergate scandal.
"[It's] really fantastic that the government has now finally got their act together and accepted that some human beings are transgender and they shouldn't be abused for that institutionally," said Ela Xora, an artist who campaigns for intersex and trans rights.
Despite having historic roots in rap music's Bronx birth, Spanish speakers have often found themselves taken for granted in the hip-hop conversation, institutionally marginalized in a culture they'd not only co-founded but helped to grow and thrive for decades.
Departing Labour MPs accused opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn of engineering a hijacking of the party by the hard-left, and of turning Labour into an "institutionally anti-Semitic" organization bent on hiding the true scale of its hostility toward Jews.
"The UK is in the early stages of a secular shift toward institutionally-owned urban rental housing, similar to what we have seen in the US over the last two decades," CBRE Chief Executive Bob Sulentie said in a statement.
"The UK is in the early stages of a secular shift toward institutionally-owned urban rental housing, similar to what we have seen in the US over the last two decades," CBRE Chief Executive Officer Bob Sulentie said in a statement.
Still, this is, at least, a solution scaled to the problem, even if it's one that seems particularly difficult in a society as ideologically divided, demographically anxious, suspicious of government, and institutionally resistant to sweeping legislative change as our own.
Directed by Fede Álvarez (best-known for the twisty 2016 thriller Don't Breathe), the film stars Claire Foy as Lisbeth Salander, a brilliant computer hacker and vigilante who makes it her mission to punish men who hurt women, either individually or institutionally.
Some toxic brew of political polarization, gerrymandering and our cumbersome constitutional structure has left us with a legislature that is institutionally incapable of doing anything more than lurching from crisis to crisis, usually (but not always!) avoiding disaster at the last minute.
" 'Putting his chips on MBS' "I think that President Trump is putting his chips on MBS," said Simon Henderson, director of the Gulf and Energy Policy Program at the Washington Institute, but added, "I don't think institutionally, the State Department or Pentagon are.
The question is whether House Democrats will realize that control of the people's branch places them in power rather than in opposition — and whether Republicans, behaving institutionally rather than ideologically, will join them in returning Congress to its pride of constitutional place.
But while few modern religions seem to blend pragmatism and prophecy quite so seamlessly, the Mormon church's often mild-mannered and institutionally minded presidents rarely match the biblical image of prophets as wild-haired social critics who feed on locusts and honey.
And today, while Trump hasn't received much support from scholars and intellectuals, his most outspoken advocates in the academy are a group of Straussians clustered institutionally around Claremont McKenna College and its theoretical organs, the Claremont Review of Books and the website American Greatness.
Over the last few years, society has finally started to celebrate the power of on-screen representation to translate into off-screen changes in how we see ourselves and how we see others (which often leads to changes in our politics, personally and institutionally).
"Just because the John Birch Society is no longer hanging out their shingles, just because they want to call the White Citizens Council the Citizens Council and maybe put an African-American on the staff, nothing institutionally has changed in this city," Mr. Price said.
"Institutionally, the top tier corporates and banks (in Turkey) are sound and we have confidence in company treasuries to manage their liquidity but when there's political noise that can lead to volatility," said Steve Cook, co-head of emerging market fixed income at PineBridge Investments.
One can't dispel the suspicion that the ideal life Hägglund is envisaging is something like his own—ethically and intellectually satisfying work, pursued as a worthy end in itself, with plenty of freedom and vacation time (though institutionally dependent on a busy, fertile capitalism).
A problem with creating a show entirely from one private collection — quite apart from the ethics of institutionally promoting potentially resalable art — is that you have to work with what's there, and the Barjeel collection, on the evidence here, is not an especially imaginative one.
Their inclusion signals not only the historical scope of the exhibition but also its institutionally serious purpose to focus mostly on those who have been identified — whether by themselves or by society — as artists, rather than on prisoners who happen to have made art.
But it has been extremely difficult for him to do — partly because it was hard, institutionally, to actually reduce the threat of deportation for immigrants who've been in the US for years, and partly because fear is too powerful a thing to be banished quickly.
As Tausif Noor has written, in an excellent essay on the collateral societal damage of a platform controlling whether we think our friends are safe or not, by "explicitly and institutionally entering into life-and-death matters, Facebook takes on new responsibilities for responding to them appropriately".
As women came forward to report harassment and assault in recent months, "the main reaction was punishing bad actors, as though that behavior was not institutionally supported," said Sheerine Alemzadeh, co-founder of Healing to Action, a nonprofit that helps workers advocate against gender-based violence.
The details: The Labour Party, which overwhelmingly supported remaining in the European Union in the 2016 referendum, continues to be plagued with charges of rising anti-Semitism within its ranks, with one departing MP calling the party "institutionally anti-Semitic" at a press conference announcing her resignation.
Voters fed up with the two main parties have plenty of other options, whether Lib Dem or Green (which also offers outright opposition to Brexit), or a battered, bruised and increasingly far-right UK Independence Party, which clung on to some seats despite having fallen apart institutionally.
The co-living microflats market now accounts for 24.5 to 21 percent of Britain's 25 billion pound build-to-rent private rental sector, made up of institutionally-backed blocks of flats built for families to rent, James Mannix, head of residential capital markets at property group Knight Frank, said.
And while it's easy to chuckle at what Akebono has been up to for the last 221 years, it obscures a sumo career that was truly superlative: he was the first gaijin, or non-Japanese, to earn the highest rank in a sport that was institutionally guarded against outsiders.
"Predominantly White collegiate institutions continue to be as unprepared for Black student enrollment as they were in the 033's and, therefore, are all but 'institutionally blind and deaf' or simply in denial relative to the legitimacy of Black student concerns and interests," he wrote in a December tract.
There are two lessons to learn from Mr. Javid's appointment: The fight against an unjust immigration system does not change with a new home secretary, and if we remain satisfied with representation as the sole means of progress, diversity becomes a shield for a government's institutionally racist policies.
This made her, according to Gregory Volk, part of the alternative history of spiritual abstraction in the company of figures such as Emma Kunz, Hilma Af Klimt, and Annie Besant, all recently institutionally re-discovered (contrasting with the rational, cerebral, often male abstraction embodied by LeWitt and Serra).
Cuomo said Tuesday morning that he wanted to make sure the DA pursuing the case would "have no conflict whatsoever with the attorney general, either institutionally or personally" to assuage the women in the article who outlined that fear about Schneiderman's political power and position stopped them going public earlier.
Part of my commitment as an art historian is to promote understanding about a community, an ethnic community and a racialized community, certainly to broadcast how significant their cultural contributions have been to US culture, but also to ask us to think critically about why they're still so underrepresented institutionally.
If we want a society in which public policy defends the life and dignity of all, supports marriage and family, promotes the common good, recognizes religious freedom personally and institutionally, welcomes immigrants and cares for our neighbors in need, then of course the church must be engaged in the public square.
On a human level, such a stark difference in institutionally permissible behavior between us felt arbitrary—like something out of magical realism (the slate grey Eastern European variety.) On the level of pure capital, well, very few aspects of a graduate program in the humanities bring real added value to the university.
Considering President Abbas and the PA's long record of denying Israel's right to exist and glorification of terror, the PA is an obstacle to peace, not a partner, and the U.S. should approach its leadership with the understanding that it institutionally engages in the indoctrination of the Palestinian people to hate Israel.
Suddenly terrified of losing access, major media outlets were then forced to mount (individually, institutionally and through their representatives at White House Correspondents' Association) a hasty, largely context-free defense of a complicated tradition rooted in a deeply conventional sense of what the news media is and how it is supposed to work.
These may sound overly restrictive, but there are rules and there are rules; some, such as Clement Greenberg's insistence in "Towards a Newer Laocoön" (1940) that painting "re-assert its material flatness," can lead to institutionally-sanctioned aridity, while others apply acupressure to the creative meridians, releasing their juices in an unstoppable flow.
As political scientist Julia Azari has written, Trump's political fortunes are tied to the odd pairing of "weak parties and strong partisanship," where the GOP is institutionally weak enough for a celebrity to impose himself on an unwilling party elite, and then the sentiment of partisanship is strong enough to ensure he receives their backing.
But more important he was constrained institutionally, in roughly the ways that Republican politicians had promised that he would be — surrounded by a conventional Republican cabinet and (after a while) a conventional White House that essentially governed for him, letting him play the authoritarian on Twitter while the business of the presidency was conducted elsewhere.
Institutionally, energy policy received its greatest boost at the State Department under Secretary of State Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE with the establishment of the Bureau of Energy Resources.
She notes how these less traditional relationships can help create new and fulfilling iterations of community and family, and she wonders whether such arrangements will ever be as institutionally recognized as marriage, which remains one of the easiest and most straightforward routes to providing loved ones with access to assets, health care and other benefits largely reserved for spouses.
The paralysis in Berlin, however, with a new government not expected until March and Ms. Merkel weakened, has delayed what was meant to be the central task of the bloc — figuring out how to reform itself institutionally to ensure that the euro is weatherproof and sustainable, to avoid new shocks from member states like Greece, Spain and Italy.
In politics, it's likely that you won't get an America where liberals are institutionally invested in the Senate until liberal constituencies feel that they can be more justly represented in that body — which at the very least requires Democrats to figure out a way to win more Senate seats, and possibly to change the institution somewhat once they do.
Lemann, a journalist and dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, contrasts two paradigms for the U.S. economy: the 1950s model where large businesses vied with a powerful government in an institutionally stable system, and the post-1980 world in which executives are remunerated by large grants of stock options and takeover deals proliferate.
Today's tidbit comes from New Zealand, home of good things like Lorde and indeed the Lord of the Rings films, where an intrepid hacker has been playing NWA's protest anthem "Fuck tha Police" (as well as a Rage Against the Machine cover) on a loop over police radio frequencies, ergo forcing cops to listen to a song about how institutionally terrible the LAPD were.
Liberty also hits out at the less than three-month timeframe the reviewers were given to complete the report as "clearly insufficient" — and points out that Anderson's advisors included a former director of technology and engineering at GCHQ, and a former director of intelligence for the National Crime Agency, arguing the review panel was thus not institutionally independent of the security and law enforcement agencies.
When the idea was first kicked around months ago, the main case for a third-party candidate was that the G.O.P. could actually benefit institutionally from an independent anti-Trump campaign — that it would help rescue down-ballot Republicans by giving anti-Trump conservatives a reason to turn out, and it might even help save the Republican brand from being permanently tarnished, permanently Trumpified.
Bloomberg does not have Trump's flagrant vices (though some of his alleged behavior with women is pretty bad) or his bald disdain for norms and rules and legal niceties, and so a Bloomberg presidency will feel less institutionally threatening, less constitutionally perilous, than the ongoing wildness of the Trump era — in addition to delivering at least some of the policy changes that liberals and Democrats desire.
But I wonder, given the differential experience of black and white people in America historically, as well as the absence of a truly independent Black philosophical system that codifies artistic values, if it is possible that even black Americans and white Americans observing from the same social strata really see the same thing when they look at the creations of these institutionally minted "modern" black artists.
A number of artists explicitly call out the forces that have seen work by people of color underrepresented institutionally in Europe and the US. Anna Boghiguian, an Egyptian-born artist, who, like Lubaina Himid, has received a burst of attention comparatively late in her career, has a fierce wall of text and pastel drawings showing at Sfeir Semler, touching on hot-button themes of institutional racism and white privilege.
At the time, Mr. Vance had said that there was not enough evidence to prosecute, even though Mr. Weinstein's accuser, Ambra Battilana, an Italian model, had provided police with a recording of him apologizing in response to a question about why he had groped her breasts "I want to make sure the district attorneys have no conflicts whatsoever with the attorney general's office, either institutionally or personally," Mr. Cuomo said during an unrelated news conference on Tuesday.
After World War II, President Harry Truman saw the already strong presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt beefed up institutionally by the National Security Act of 1947, which gave the president unified command of all armed forces under a new Department of Defense, a new National Security Council in the White House to run U.S. foreign policy and a new intelligence arm (the CIA) that did not report to the military commanders and could undertake secret presidential wars, unbeknownst to Congress and the public.
Whether you're a consumer, a techie or a D.C. lifer, we're here to give you ...   THE BIG STORY: --PUSH BACK: An FBI source tells CNN that FBI head James Comey feels that "institutionally he has to push back on" claims Donald Trump made without evidence that former President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaDick Cheney to attend fundraiser supporting Trump reelection: report Forget conventional wisdom — Bernie Sanders is electable 2628 Democrats fight to claim Obama's mantle on health care MORE bugged Trump Tower during the campaign.
Although Nochlin's essay did not provide a comprehensive or systematic model for a feminist art history, it did posit a clear methodological approach, which she keenly reiterates in her conclusion: By stressing the institutional, rather than the individual, or private, preconditions for achievement or the lack of it in the arts, I have tried to provide a paradigm for the investigations of other areas in the field […] I have suggested that it was indeed institutionally made impossible for women to achieve artistic excellence, or success, on the same footing as men, no matter what the potency of their so-called talent, or genius.

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