It explains the kinds of tactics interrogators are likely to use to coerce you into confessing or divulging information. |
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What industries will step forward next and try to coerce consumerism when they can't win it fairly in the so-called free market? |
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Different kinds of complements and modifiers can often coerce a perfective or an imperfective reading. |
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She linked it back to the government's ability to coerce statements out of key intelligence officials for their own political ends. |
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Most of these groups employed threats to coerce people into making transactions or to derive benefit. |
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She's being held in civil contempt, because they want to coerce her into talking. |
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A strong family member, for example, might coerce the votes of weaker members of the family. |
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I know, I know, I can't coerce anyone into liking cats, but all I ask is that you please have an open mind about the species. |
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The movie is full of wit and stuff that would coerce a chuckle out of anyone, from teenagers to adults. |
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Since God does not coerce, human efforts and prayers invoking divine aid make a difference in the workings of chance and necessity. |
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The temptresses then coerce the hapless chaps into making complete fools of themselves. |
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The alleged intention was to coerce privatisation of the national oil company into the hands of the foreign investor group. |
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The following is a letter from a woman who police attempted to coerce false testimony from. |
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However, money is not the driving force for Gen-Xers and companies that try to coerce them by throwing money at them will not see results. |
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All kinds of groups use fear to terrorize the loners and coerce fealty from those who don't want to be a target. |
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I think what Sandy is saying is that there is no way you can coerce people one way or the other to do what you want them to do. |
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Mischa pressed the dagger enough to coerce him to let go of her. |
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The Naval Postgraduate School has defined cyberterrorism as the unlawful destruction or disruption of digital property to intimidate or coerce people. |
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Somehow, magically, these evildoers coerce the young to commit suicide. |
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He lusted after the headlines, and hoped strong-arm tactics would coerce settlements. |
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Some believe that pharmaceutical companies coerce patient organizations into conforming to their marketing agenda. |
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The Federalist papers of 1787-88 argue that trying to coerce a group of sovereign states to follow common rules is ultimately doomed. |
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There are many other less violent ways to coerce or to lead the child to a confession or a self-incriminatory testimony. |
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These were later used to coerce the victims into sending more under the threat of disclosure. |
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His decision to coerce Netanyahu into imposing a 10-month settlement freeze was also a colossal misjudgment. |
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Such conflicts may involve attempts by some to influence or coerce choices of others about whether to participate in research. |
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Over the last 50 years, it has been used only to deter acts of aggression against our vital interests, never to coerce others. |
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Solitary confinement was never used to punish them or coerce them into making a confession. |
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Thus, it's refreshing to have an opportunity to see an intelligent slice of beefcake use his masculine wiles to seduce and coerce a woman to do his bidding. |
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Constitutionally, the Treasury cannot coerce us into any action. |
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It could try to coerce conformity or it could become tolerant. |
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It is a victory for the MP, who has been urging the government to bring in new laws making it a crime to aid and abet or coerce a forced marriage. |
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A fellow justice also accused McCaffery of attempting to coerce him into opposing Castille. |
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Once again Russia brandishes the threat of a gas cutoff to squeeze Kiev and coerce Europe. |
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In other instances, CIA recruiters used thinly veiled threats to coerce their cooperation. |
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Religious liberty, Jefferson argued, denies the majority any right to coerce a dissenting minority, even one hostile to religion. |
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At times, it is necessary to coerce an unsigned integer from one type to another, resulting in a change in the number of bits used to represent the number. |
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In addition, it is unlawful to fraudulently influence, coerce, manipulate or mislead any independent public or certified accountant who is auditing our financial statements. |
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This ensures that unions and employers cannot induce, coerce or threaten workers into voting a particular way or use undue influence to affect the outcome of a vote. |
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No Director may directly or indirectly take any action to fraudulently influence, coerce, manipulate or mislead CIBC's independent external auditors for the purpose of rendering CIBC's financial statements misleading. |
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Refusal of primary healthcare, or the threat of such, shall never be used in order to coerce refused applicants to return to their state of origin. |
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And in that way the police prevent their family and lawyers from seeing them until they could coerce, through torture or other means, confessions from them. |
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Prisoners included political troublemakers and individuals held at the request of their families, often to coerce a young member into obedience or to prevent a disreputable member from marring the family's name. |
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However, critics say the strong-arm tactics they're using to coerce the sale of New Brunswick's only existing slaughterhouse may spike their plans. |
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The ruling should coerce the Turkish government to completely omit religious affiliation on future identity cards. |
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Charles's confrontation with the Scots came to a head in 1639, when he tried and failed to coerce Scotland by military means. |
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Confidence in the attack, in the intimidating gesticulation of power and in the ability to coerce or compel others into taking a given course of action are all buttressed by robust defences. |
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In that context, nuclear terrorism does not only represent an effort to intimidate and coerce, but also poses a critical threat to states and peoples around the world. |
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That repressive and restrictive measure was used to coerce witnesses to give evidence and became a tool of the apartheid regime in political trials. |
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In Foucaultian terms, we are not dealing with sovereign power to coerce or misrepresent, but the power to regulate and routinise. |
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There is significant concern about drug treatment courts in many quarters, because many people believe that it is impossible to coerce somebody into drug treatment. |
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Moral obligation is not necessitation. The moral law commands but does not coerce us. |
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Charles' confrontation with the Scots came to a head in 1639, when Charles tried and failed to coerce Scotland by military means. |
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And if variations are allowed on the basis that a worker or group of workers has consented, some employers will likely use their bargaining strength to coerce consent. |
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This ended up in the High Court and defeat for the FAW in its attempt to coerce clubs to join the League of Wales. |
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The Occupying Power shall not compel, coerce or induce civilian civil defence organizations to perform their tasks in any manner prejudicial to the interests of the civilian population. |
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I think there has been a failure of the researchers to work with the farmers, and we need more effort in relation to extension services to get the message across, to encourage and not to coerce. |
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So transcultural poetics has an amorphousness about it that is also about a dynamicity and aversion to coerce frameworks of reading into hierarchical value systems. |
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Between the two world wars a branch of the escapees, in this case even worse than the civilizers, was able to coerce the latter into a temporary alliance. |
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In Wales, Henry used his power to coerce and charm the indigenous Welsh princes, while Norman Marcher Lords pushed across the valleys of South Wales. |
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Formerly a Pharisee, Paul confesses what he did as one of those learned elite, using intellectual prowess to co-opt holy law to coerce and repress. |
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