At the Hastings Conference of 1933, the Party had declared its commitment to two potentially contradictory policies.
The TVNZ Charter would require the negotiation and reconciliation of potentially contradictory commercial and public service imperatives.
But she also combines two potentially contradictory viewpoints, a feminist viewpoint and a pro-bourgious viewpoint, highlighting the elevated position of the ruling middle classes in creating aesthetically valuable architecture.
With that pledge, Mr. Giuliani set himself an awesome challenge: to deliver on a potentially contradictory agenda of satisfying the middle class and businesses while not forsaking people unable to fend for themselves.
Charles Edward Clark, a member of the circuit's original Wilko panel, noted in his opinion the potentially contradictory nature of the Supreme Court's Wilko dictum and its Bernhardt footnote.
If two fatwā are potentially contradictory, the ruling bodies (combined civil and religious law) would attempt to define a compromise interpretation that will eliminate the resulting ambiguity.
The principle of lis alibi pendens (Latin for "dispute elsewhere pending") applies both in municipal law, public international law, and private international law to address the problem of potentially contradictory judgments.
These objectives are potentially contradictory.
Community leaders had been expected to issue a statement Friday on Yugoslavia, but action was suspended because of disagreements over the relative importance it should give to the potentially contradictory principles of self-determination and territorial integrity.
Keys to the mature appropriation of space are therefore the deconstruction of socially produced meanings, as well as the ability to communicate one's own, potentially contradictory meanings and negotiate them with others.