substantive
(adjective)
Of the core essence or essential element of a thing or topic.
Examples of substantive in the following topics:
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Substantives
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Styles of Interpersonal Conflict
- We can distinguish between two type of conflict: substantive and affective.
- Substantive conflicts deal with aspects of a team's work.
- Other substantive conflicts involve how team members work together.
- Both substantive and affective conflicts can be separated into those that happen within an organization and those that happen between two or more different organizations.
- Explain the distinction between substantive and affective conflicts and between intra- and inter-organizational conflict
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Milton Friedman
- The structure of this positive science, like all positive sciences, consists of two parts; first, is a language and second, is a "body of substantive hypothesis designed to abstract essential features of complex reality" (Ibid. p 7).
- This language has no substantive content.
- The body of "substantive hypotheses" or theory is primarily to yield "valid and meaningful (i.e. not truistic) predictions about phenomena not yet observed" (Ibid).
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The Right to Due Process
- The Supreme Court of the United States interprets these two clauses as providing four protections: procedural due process in civil and criminal proceedings, substantive due process, a prohibition against vague laws, and as the vehicle for the incorporation of the Bill of Rights .
- The term substantive due process (SDP) is commonly used in two ways: first to identify a particular line of case law, and second to signify a particular attitude toward judicial review under the Due Process Clause.
- The term substantive due process began to take form in 1930s legal casebooks as a categorical distinction of selected due process cases, and by 1950 had been mentioned twice in Supreme Court opinions.
- Today, the Court focuses on three types of rights under substantive due process in the Fourteenth Amendment, which originated in United States v.
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Preamble
- Substantively, the case was about eminent domain.
- This area of substantive constitutional law is governed by the Fifth Amendment, which is understood to require that property acquired via eminent domain must be put to a "public use".
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Third Declension
- But they do not have -ī the Ablative, except when employed as adjectives; when used as participles or as substantives, they have -e; as,—
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Leadership
- In this way, leaders seek to bring about substantive changes in their teams, organizations, and societies.
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News Coverage
- Many criticize this shift in emphasis for depriving audiences of substantive information about candidates' policy platforms .
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Introduction to defining equivalence or similarity
- Of these, "automorphic" has rarely been used in substantive work.
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The Knoke bureaucracies information exchange network analyzed by Tabu search
- The solution is also an interesting one substantively.