English to Tamil Dictionary institutionalize

institutionalize

ஸ்தாபனமயப்படுத்தும்
definition
verb
a system that institutionalizes bad behavior
establish (something, typically a practice or activity) as a convention or norm in an organization or culture.
these adolescents had more contacts with the police and were charged and institutionalized more often
place or keep (someone) in a residential institution.
example
A decision to permit generics to bid on procurement contracts will 'institutionalize' market competition and drive prices, including those of new drugs, steadily downward.
Let's 'institutionalize' the process, say that each of us will talk to our membership or our leadership about our goals.
The more difficult task is to 'institutionalize' a process that can achieve his vision.
The outburst may have been violent and warrant for arrest or to 'institutionalize' her, but I provoked it.
She had left the United States because she believed that Robert would again try to 'institutionalize' her.
It is widely supposed that one way to do this is to 'institutionalize' the decision-making process, transforming it from an individual action into a collective one.
The true tragedy hasn't been his condition, but rather the doctor who wanted to 'institutionalize' him, the school that refused his admittance, the babysitter that insisted I remain at the childcare center.
We must constantly work to improve conditions in all areas of our work and 'institutionalize' our process improvements.
By joining with others to 'institutionalize' green practices this way, public departments have become agents of change, adding real value to their portfolio of building assets while reaping civic dividends.
Decker was worried that I might try to 'institutionalize' him.
The boy is a product of a troubled homelife and he was 'institutionalized' at 12 after threatening to commit suicide to get away from his abusive father; his mother is not in the picture.
Under the influence of Hume's empirical philosophy in the second half of the eighteenth century, the idea that natural science was a positivistic practice was 'institutionalized' .
Your whole family makes the effort to shower him with affection, yet his psychological problems worsen and you talk to your spouse about 'institutionalizing' him.
But anthropology, in fact, guards a treasure house of examples of what happens when a society 'institutionalizes' other arrangements.
Her town of 10,000 basically thinks that all elderly demented people should be 'institutionalized' instead of cared for at home.
These campaign finance laws forced special interests to organize into political action committees and greatly 'institutionalized' the practice of buying influence with campaign contributions.
The Singaporean culture seems rather hectic and competitive, with a heavily 'institutionalised' public education system where the workload gets heavy at a very early level.
Mom spent the years 1967 to 1988 providing some level of care to Dad while he was 'institutionalized' .
The fact that someone else would make better choices than the elderly person does not require the appointment of a guardian or 'institutionalizing' the elderly person.
The federal government has 'institutionalized' a process where government lawyers in the Department of Justice evaluate government bills for their consistency with Charter values.
She was 'institutionalized' after I found out who she was and what she was trying to do to us.
So what you're saying there, it's great to get young people involved in sport in any way we can, but some of these older people who are 'institutionalised' , they can't play sport when they go out, but they might just want to go out and watch it.
One thing I do know is that he was 'institutionalized' at some point in the late 50s - early 60s, was probably shuffled around a bit through the years, and ended up dying in the care of a nursing home.
Quakers have 'institutionalized' this practice by encouraging individuals to join in silence even in the heat of argument as a way of building a bond of unity in the midst of controversy.
Back then, if you were a junkie, you were 'institutionalized' or sent to jail.
But one of the most scary and frustrating is wandering, and often ends with the person being 'institutionalised' .
Hired in 1969 to head UCSF's modest chemistry department, Rutter 'institutionalized' the practice of collaborative research on a grand scale.
She's then 'institutionalized' for the remainder of the film.
With these latest actions, the government is 'institutionalizing' a procedure under which the president, invoking his position as commander-in-chief, can issue an edict and imprison anyone he chooses.
As a system of circulation and exchange, the post office 'institutionalises' modes of correspondence, producing and regulating particular subjectivities.
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