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"paternalism" Definitions
  1. the system in which a government or an employer protects the people who are governed or employed by providing them with what they need, but does not give them any responsibility or freedom of choice

158 Sentences With "paternalism"

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

The industry's paternalism gave way to the paternalism of the federal government and its S.S.I. checks and black-lung checks and food stamps.
There's paternalism and arrogance and insensitivity, all of those things.
"The overt paternalism here is disappointing," Mayer and Narayana say.
In short, the federation statement reeks of paternalism and hypocrisy.
This was not rich serving the poor (Addams hated paternalism).
"It's libertarian paternalism, or maybe it's paternalistic libertarianism," he said.
Sweet is an unlikely advocate for a kind of soft paternalism.
Though capable of ruthlessness, Mr. Ochs prided himself on his benevolent paternalism.
We just have to choose together, to embrace temperance and paternalism both.
Some of these decrees keep costs down, but they also reek of paternalism.
Today, the paternalism struggles to disguise itself, as in the recent variety show.
Kavanaugh's condescending paternalism toward women and girls is a theme throughout his decisions.
That kind of paternalism is, in some way, the force being retaliated against.
One might attribute this fact to their paternalism, their myopia, or their rectitude.
This brand of violent paternalism mutated in modern times but never went away.
Unfortunately, misguided policy and corporate paternalism are creating a perfect storm for subprime Americans.
The scene suggests any reason as equally possible, resisting tidy explanations or vapid paternalism.
They were also inclined to moralizing white paternalism and an acceptance of racial segregation.
They are of a piece with China's deep-seated bureaucratic traditions of coercion and paternalism.
"I think if we have a right to paternalism, that's where we do," Wallach says.
Under the auspices of the Macron Plan, Africa demands neither charity, paternalism, nor band-aids.
The establishment had chastised the young, and now the young were pushing back against paternalism.
If "libertarian paternalism" sounds oxymoronic, so too does the way that traditional democracies run: through coercion.
Wade in 1992, but his latest opinion on abortion, in 2007, hinted of old-school paternalism.
"I don't see our relationship with the people we're serving as one of paternalism," he said.
We should embrace liberal principles on free trade and open markets, anti-paternalism and human rights.
Native Hawaiians, meanwhile, were seen as good-natured but lazy, and in need of white paternalism.
The new play is about parenthood, paternalism and what it means to work for the people.
There is a great deal of smugness in all of this, and worse, a dangerous paternalism.
Your article accuses them of "physician paternalism," but their judgment and experience should outweigh a Google search.
I have been railing against this kind of paternalism, this slide toward popular monarchy, for almost a decade.
Their romance is a study of love and difference, of how pity and paternalism can stifle true communication.
After centuries of mistreatment and paternalism, the tribes consistently receive nothing but ignorant dismissal from the dominant society.
It was typical of his recent appearances -- factual and frightening, but delivered with a reassuring dash of paternalism.
It often requires a healthy dose of benign paternalism and, in some cases, involuntary care through civil commitment.
And to combine that insult with a call that Clinton deserves a spanking is to fuse paternalism with misogyny.
Such comradeship assuages some of the resentment Filipinos feel at the mix of brutality and paternalism of American rule.
In their book Nudge, Cass Sunstein and Richard Thaler wrote about the use of "choice architecture" and libertarian paternalism.
Bekah Brunstetter's civic-minded new play is about parenthood, paternalism and what it means to work for the people.
That sort of benevolent paternalism discrimination, as well as stereotyping that you're going to be less committed, is common.
But this was just another sign of Australian paternalism, said Jim Bero, one of the pub's seven board members.
It's based on an attitude of paternalism that has plagued policy makers in this country probably since its founding.
Nudges could paradoxically enable the state to shape the public's choices for the better (paternalism) while maintaining their freedom (libertarian).
The best tax policy avoids paternalism: It does not try to push companies or people to behave a certain way.
Concern about their well being, emotional and otherwise, has less to do with paternalism than with our deeper emotional investment.
Now many of them volunteer at the support centre, although the way she describes their work suggests a certain paternalism.
Of course they're also a bigger compromise with paternalism than the Republican Party's True Conservatives are currently willing to accept.
This background gives him more authority than his predecessors have had, and will help to insulate him from complaints about paternalism.
Calling a 22-year-old "virtually a child" or other solecisms I've seen circulating lately is neo-paternalism masquerading as feminism.
They have created memes about the encounter, framing the incident as a brave display of will in the face of paternalism.
Gilman's matriarchy perpetuates its fair share of inequity and iniquity: blacks are taken to be an inferior race, treated with paternalism.
There might be no better artist than Rist to satirize the country's very public turn to male chauvinism and political paternalism.
If he continues the paternalism of his father, he may become a focal symbol for rebuilding trust among his own kin.
This is a play about class, ambition and self-determination, but it's even more concerned with the suffocating effects of paternalism.
The senators, unable to impeach her credibility outright and leery of exposing their callousness and contempt, chose instead a patronizing paternalism.
This paternalism I don't think reflects a personal moral failing on his part, but one that is a consequence of age.
In some quarters the very idea leads to a dangerous elevation of the blood pressure, because it suggests paternalism, coercion or worse.
Much of the millennial advantage can be traced to Canadian paternalism—that of the state and that of the youngsters' indulgent parents.
The law was also intended to combat the discrimination, born of misconceptions, stereotypes and paternalism, that Americans with disabilities face every day.
Even lying for benevolent reasons risks a coercive kind of paternalism, and can be corrupting, like any other unchecked exercise of power.
Until the 1980s, "doctor knows best" paternalism relieved physicians of any obligation to share a prognosis — or even a diagnosis — with patients.
Corporate paternalism might have been born from self-interest, but it helped to create a culture that was hard to shake loose.
Possible, basically, only in the 1980s, after the movements had more or less subsided and capitalism and jokey white paternalism ran wild.
Republican policies on those issues are tied to a traditional view of gender roles, leaning heavily on ideas about paternalism and chivalry.
Many of the elements are ready: the databases; the digital surveillance; the system of reward and punishment; and the we-know-best paternalism.
The founders of the Indian republic categorically rejected such paternalism; it should not be smuggled in today through the backdoor of local government.
Years ago, when we discussed paternalism versus patient autonomy in my medical school ethics class, I came down strongly in favor of autonomy.
Women's groups have accused Spanish judges of paternalism and bias for demanding that victims demonstrate that they had fought back against their attackers.
It's just that conservatism has given up — once again, in unwarranted despair — on earlier assumptions about how public paternalism can encourage private virtue.
It emerged in the 1970s alongside greater emphasis on patient autonomy and patient-centeredness, as opposed to the paternalism that had historically dominated medicine.
It's questioning the premise of the Guardians; the way protection and security lead toward controlling paternalism; the nature and limits of bravery and heroism.
As medicine moves away from doctor-knows-best paternalism, students are being schooled in engaging the patient with a joint-decision-making, team approach.
As medicine moves away from doctor-knows-best paternalism, students are being schooled in engaging the patient with a joint-decision-making, team approach.
And Thomas just doesn't believe that it's impossible to remedy these injustices, he also believes that the acts of paternalism end up perpetuating the injustices.
Yet her manifesto also reveals a new Tory paternalism, no longer aiming to reduce the reach of the state but instead pursuing an interventionist strategy.
They have also accused Spanish judges of paternalism and bias against women by forcing victims to demonstrate that they had fought back against sex attackers.
Having not trained in an era steeped in medical paternalism, younger physicians are more likely to place the patient on the pedestal rather than themselves.
In his opinion, Justice William Brennan disavowed the court's previous '' 'romantic paternalism' which, in practical effect, put women not on a pedestal, but in a cage.
With regard to labor, the big tech companies tend toward the paternalism of offering free goods and services on lavish campuses, as well as good pay.
But more than 20 years later, women argue they face earning less than men, routine questioning of their competence, and condescension and paternalism on the job.
"We have had enough imperious paternalism from Albany and Washington," he told Democrats in western New York in May 1973, months before officially announcing his candidacy.
In the United States, these ideas would evolve into a sadistic paternalism — that slavery was actually good for Africans because they were incapable of self-governance.
His ethnonationalist paternalism is now the avant-garde model for right-wing fellow travelers such as Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Hungary's Viktor Orban, and Donald Trump.
"All we're saying is that patients have a right to choose as opposed to the right being denied them by the forces of paternalism," he said.
Universities have a duty to keep campuses safe, not in the service of paternalism, but in the service of providing a suitable learning environment for students.
Normally, when Rubio tried that role on, it looked like he was wearing his dad's suit, his boyish, sing-song-y voice failing to match Reagan's paternalism.
These days country-music stars live in some of the oil barons' grand villas but, by way of compensation for the economic pendulum, the paternalism lives on.
They argue that it is high time to carry out education campaigns and infant screening for the infection, arguing that it smacks of paternalism to do otherwise.
Nonetheless, Mr. Smith wrote: Government paternalism is in some sense a last resort, but it has worked wonders in the realm of public health in the past.
Though they did not say this in so many words, their view of him suggests the idea of the president as a symbol of white paternalism in blackface.
"I remain concerned that many bureau actions demonstrate regulatory paternalism that assumes the American consumer doesn't know how to make choices for themselves," he said at the hearing.
For weeks, Dr. Köhler toured the talk shows, and the AfD celebrated him as a hero for daring to speak up against what it sees as ecological paternalism.
He becomes an emblem of do-gooding wishy-washy, optics-obsessed paternalism — and these Panther parties were possibly beside the point of most engaged interracial civil rights struggles.
That's because the Singaporean vision is built around personal responsibility and private spending, but also a degree of statism and paternalism that present-day American conservatism instinctively rejects.
It was naive to expect that after 22011 years of Soviet rule, and several centuries of paternalism before that, Russia would rapidly emerge as a functioning Western-style democracy.
" The bottom line: Wartzman does not expect a return to the corporate paternalism of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, but sees upside in revisiting "how the pie is divided.
Lifestyle modifications are critically important to improving national health, but to present those efforts as alternatives to more technologically difficult efforts smacks of either defeatism or paternalism or both.
In his "Letter From a Birmingham Jail," Martin Luther King Jr. wrote that the paternalism of white moderates may be a greater barrier to fundamental change than outright racism.
One can regard this now-venerable process as the manifestation of a lopsided power dynamic, and, in this case, even as paternalism on the part of Barr and MOMA.
In the end, all they do is convey the less than obvious messages around black dependency and white paternalism; leaving folks with the feel of an allyship with minimal effort.
Butler realised that this die-hard attitude would bring disaster and argued that the Tories would be better off countering socialist do-goodery with a new form of Conservative paternalism.
But all of this jockeying raises a larger question about how well Facebook truly knows its users, and how much it can steer their media preferences without veering into paternalism.
If elite paternalism is the preferred mode of Silicon Valley leaders—evident in their belief that people like them should run social programs—tech workers are taking a different tack.
He opened limited space for small private enterprise, introduced performance-based salary increases and reduced state subsidies, publicly rejecting "three principles of Fidelismo: paternalism, idealism and egalitarianism," Mr. Latell said.
There is no sign that such schemes have strayed beyond the creepy paternalism that is often exhibited by local governments and that is just as often shrugged off by local residents.
This can look like what Martin called "misguided paternalism," like when a supervisor tells you that you shouldn't take on a project because you have so much going on at home.
They are unlikely to be aware of what legal scholar Daniel Foote called the "benevolent paternalism" of the Japanese legal system, in which totally unfair convictions are generally thought to be rare.
"The culture of U.S. paternalism prevailed at that time, and the Caribbean was basically a U.S. lake," said Amity Shlaes, the author of the biography "Coolidge" and the chairwoman of his presidential foundation.
Bruce Beresford directs Mr. Church as though he regrets not piling enough sentiment into his 1989 film Driving Miss Daisy, or as if he misses the accusations of racially tinged paternalism surrounding it.
Thaler and Sunstein call this "libertarian paternalism" —paternalistic in assuming policymakers know what diners need better than diners do and libertarian in allowing diners to make the final choice of what to eat.
Though neither Katie nor "Midnight Sun" seems disturbed by the paternalism of her circumstances, most fairy tales revolve around a prince, not a parent, and, accordingly, both Katie and the film idealize romance.
The fact that this all-women show is the brainchild of men might have drawn fire for paternalism were it not for the show's persuasive politics, at the intersection of feminism and race.
Thaler and Sunstein describe the philosophy that underlies nudging as "libertarian paternalism" — libertarian because it lets people make the choices that they want to, paternalist because it provides them with a father's guiding hand.
The prep-to-pro generation invites easy moralizing and, too often, an uneasy streak of paternalism from those who believe they understand the best interests of these young players better than they do themselves.
Roberts feels she has more in common with her clients than the charity organizations that typically serve them, and having previously sought help from charities herself, she loathes what she sees as their paternalism.
But as she points out, if this is going to be successful, we&aposre going to have to address the issue of like sort of benign paternalism and coercive treatment for people that refuse it.
This creeping intolerance chimes with the paternalism of "trigger warnings", whereby students are alerted to potentially upsetting passages in novels or other texts, as if solidarity in suffering were not one of art's chief purposes.
The concept of gauging patient satisfaction goes back to the 1980s, part of a seismic shift toward patients' becoming more involved in health care decision-making, and away from the-doctor-is-always-right paternalism.
In the face of what he saw as medical paternalism, he argued that patients should have more autonomy over what treatments they receive and a choice in whether they even receive any treatment at all.
It is important to remember that China's model of governance has always been one based on paternalism, and the authoritarian hold Xi and the Communist Party have on its people relies heavily on economic growth.
In the article, Libertarian Paternalism Is Not an Oxymoron, Richard Thaler, father of behavioral economics, and his colleague Cass Sunstein explore the science underlying opting in, arguing persuasively that people are biased toward the status quo.
From then on, "one-nation" Toryism, also known as "Tory paternalism" or "Tory democracy", became the organising principle for the left of the party and successive leaders such as Anthony Eden, Harold Macmillan and Edward Heath.
Historically, encroachment on individual liberty often was justified in terms of the welfare, needs, interests or good of the persons subject to it, but it always has been the individual limited by paternalism who is being judged.
Two late installments focus on Dena, who chafes under her family's paternalism, and Ramy's mother, Maysa (Hiam Abbass, in a spectacular performance of her character's loneliness both as an immigrant and as a mother of grown children).
I was born and raised in a system that exerts control under the guise of paternalism — a system that caresses you as it beats you, that teaches you but also inhibits you, enlightens you and censures you.
It's easy to administer; it avoids the paternalism of social-welfare programs that tell people what they can and cannot buy with the money they're given; and, if it's truly universal, it could help destigmatize government assistance.
But to dismiss Devo as nostalgia compilation fodder is to overlook a body of work that feels prescient in both style and substance, rife with critiques of consumerism, right-wing ascendance, Midwestern paternalism, corporate monoculture, and geopolitical hysteria.
Trump has metastasized the perceived paternalism, paranoia and patriotism of the disenfranchised that has been ignited, stoked and flamed by iconic populists as former Republican President Teddy Roosevelt as the Bull Moose nominee in 2023, Wisconsin Republican Sen.
But at its heart, the show earned such adoring fans, many of whom were apparently intimately involved in Democratic politics, because it tapped into the Father Knows Best paternalism that defines a certain strain of American presidential longing.
Even at its most fatalistic, the old neo-realism was grounded in an idea of progress, in the leftist faith that after feudal paternalism and capitalist predation a better, more humane future could be imagined and struggled toward.
But that Daddy Warbucks paternalism was how, in 1982, the owner of the country's most ferocious comedic imagination — Richard Pryor — went from desperate janitor to live-in amusement for the bratty son of a rotten businessman (Jackie Gleason).
But to avoid investigating or sharing information on the subject—to assume that people can comprehend the drugs' benefits and not their limits—seems to repeat a pattern of paternalism reminiscent of earlier epochs in the history of psychopharmacology.
As long as that choice is made in a transparent manner, and is subject to democratically elected politicians, nudging offers policymakers an alternative to both the nanny state and the unintelligent one; a middle way that he describes as "libertarian paternalism".
His regal paternalism is intended to suggest that an earlier order has been restored after decades of horrors, from American bombing in the early 1970s to the civil war of the 1980s, not to mention the Khmers Rouges' grotesque Year Zero.
Of course, those demanding that content be limited on social media actually see this kind of paternalism as a desirable end because some people might fall for "fake news," Russian propaganda, or even believe the hate spewed by Alex Jones.
The other men are worth as much scrutiny as Don Giovanni, the production argues, teasing out the pushy paternalism of Don Ottavio, the class-anxiety machismo of Masetto and the guilt by association of Leporello, endearing though he may be.
A seemingly benevolent paternalism hung over that era; Smith was credited as a civil rights pioneer and his program seen as an emblem of a progressive, egalitarian South in stark contrast to the rich Jersey kids who went to Duke.
Rather than finding fault with big business, she criticized the government's role in urban affairs, which she felt had morphed from well-meaning paternalism to a wild experiment in social engineering, involving the physical eradication of neighborhoods that took generations to build.
I have many doubts, beginning with "Corn Pop," but this anecdote demonstrates a strange paternalism that he tells us is evidence of how he's been a supporter of the black community from the very beginning of race relations fights in this country.
If the Bank's core product is policy advice, then the fact that such advice comes from an organization dominated by the world's superpower, which is not itself a poor country, raises profound questions about paternalism and the autonomy of African and other poor nations.
It also, however, featured an exchange that, more than any other in recent years, displayed just how much paternalism still exists among American conservatives, who are willing to do anything to prevent American citizens being subject to the laws of the nations they traverse.
Saagar Enjeti tells a story about Joe BidenJoe BidenBiden lead shrinks, Sanders and Warren close gap: poll Biden allies: Warren is taking a bite out of his electability argument Budowsky: Donald, Boris, Bibi — The right in retreat MORE, Corn Pop, and Biden's legacy of paternalism.
Warrenism's obsession with policy detail sometimes smacks of managerial paternalism, but it aims at building and streamlining the capacity of government to reliably deliver the high-quality public goods citizens demand in a way that relieves them of the burdens of confusing paperwork and Kafkaesque administrative complexity.
Raised in the brutal paternalism of that system, Mr. Xi equates greatness with power and dissent with treachery; to him, the 50 years of relative autonomy granted Hong Kong, which ends in 2047, is time to wipe out whatever bad foreign habits its people picked up.
From the iconic white paternalism of Father Knows Best to the fantasy of "fatherly invulnerability" in Taken, there is a prevalent cultural narrative in the United States that suggests that having authority over others — especially women, children, and people of other genders — is akin to being a "good" dad.
But then, again, I hit Donald Trump, who is dragging traditional conservative paternalism into the muck of perversion, who brags about sexually assaulting women, who makes fun of the disabled, who savors a lust for vengeance, who says he has never needed to seek forgiveness, even from God.
And Washington's aggressive posture has exacerbated the refugee problem in the Caribbean, putting nations traditionally close to the U.S. in a difficult position that has brought issues of American paternalism to the fore and encouraged some to seek greater partnership with China—viewed as a less demanding and interventionist ally.
Reflecting libertarian hostility to paternalism, one guiding theme of liberaltarian safety-net reform would be to substitute simple cash transfers for in-kind benefits — liberating the poor from confusing and sometimes degrading eligibility requirements and shifting resources from poverty bureaucracies to the men, women, and children who actually need help.
Liberals simply don't want to believe that low-income Americans, black and Hispanic as well as white, might benefit from public paternalism in welfare policy, soft "values" rhetoric on marriage and family, and restrictions on illegal immigration — even though the working class's best recent decade featured a Democratic president who embraced all three.
Social conservatives argue that merely subsidizing child care or leave rather than offering a child credit favors families getting center-based child care over stay-at-home parents or family caregivers like grandparents, aunts and uncles, or cousins, and libertarian analysts resented the paternalism of requiring families to use money on child care.
At the same time the abortion-rights movement was linked in its early days to a distinctive form of upper-class WASP paternalism — in which legal abortion was sold as a means of helping upper-class "good girls" out of trouble while keeping the undesirable fertility of other classes and races in check.
There's the classist, sexist paternalism of early-Victorian-era London; the gall of certain handsome young sorcerer types; and the fact that even though she can't control her powers and has chosen to name her wand Porridge, everyone seems convinced that she alone can defeat the horrifying beings known as the Ancients.
Seles introduces Trumble and his cohort to the term "paternalism" and politely suggests that instead of jumping off the boat and snapping images of poor people, they ought to wait until the end of a volunteer activity, and then ask permission, and even then just take photos with the people, which is less patronizing than taking photos of them.
The advocates will tell you that a basic income is the most efficient form of social assistance: It neither introduces perverse incentives discouraging work nor does it mandate work to receive benefits; the system's simplicity likely reduces the bureaucratic overhead of managing complicated social programs; and, better yet, it avoids the paternalism of many social programs.
And — noting the prevalence of black athletes on college football and basketball squads — she also illuminates a culture in which the centuries-old alloy of white condescension, paternalism and awe toward athletically gifted young black men lets coaches and others in power cover up allegations, discredit accusers and do anything else to keep suspects of any race on the field.
The briefs seek to counter that, as well as what some people saw as a streak of uninformed paternalism in a 2007 majority opinion in which Justice Kennedy said many women regretted their decisions to have abortions and experienced depression and plunging self-esteem But Allan E. Parker Jr., a lawyer with the anti-abortion group the Justice Foundation, said the women's briefs may only alienate Justice Kennedy.
Here are a few pieces on Biden, with different perspectives, that may help you make up your mind: Biden's conduct is in line with a mixed policy record on women's issues, says New York magazine's Rebecca Traister: "He has provided liberal cover to anti-feminist backlash, the kind of old-fashioned paternalism of powerful men who don't take women's claims to their reproductive, professional, or political autonomy particularly seriously, who walk through the world with a casual assurance that men's access to and authority over women's bodies is natural," she writes.
But to a new new left that's allergic to paternalism in public policy and has little patience for a kind of folk-wisdom view of what's gone wrong in working class communities, the gas station owner or the coal miner or the sheriff's deputy who wants benefit limits and work requirements for his struggling friends and neighbors is at best a victim of misguided capitalism-instilled myths about meritocracy, at worst a proto-fascist petty boss (the petit-bourgeoisie did vote for fascists in Europe, after all) with his boot on the neck of the class below him.

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