Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2.  5    |            is that most employment relationships are informal and insecure,
 2    I,     2.  5    |            tasks. Some contractual relationships have become more informal.
 3    I,     2. 11    |           New Forms of Contractual Relationships and the Implications for
 4   II,     5.  1.  1|           with family and personal relationships, difficulty in expressing
 5   II,     5.  1.  2|         leisure pursuits and close relationships, i.e. all the things we
 6   II,     5.  5.Int|       establishing and maintaining relationships. Women living in poverty
 7   II,     5.  5.Int|  difficulty in personal and family relationships and can be left feeling
 8   II,     5.  5.  3|           with family and personal relationships, difficulty in expressing
 9   II,     5.  5.  3|           able to establish social relationships, to live with a partner
10   II,     5.  5.  3|         from having close personal relationships and from applying for employment,
11   II,     7.  4.  7|         Influencing close personal relationships and working to create healthy
12   II,     9.  3.  1|       establishing and maintaining relationships. Women living in poverty
13   II,     9.  3.  1|           in a personal and family relationships, and can be left feeling
14   II,     9.  3.  1|    involved in coercive or abusive relationships often cannot negotiate abstinence
15   II,     9.  3.  1|          them less power in sexual relationships and therefore a high risk
16   II,     9.  3.  3|         package of questions about relationships and sexual behaviour. Countries
17   II,     9.  3.  3|            have more casual sexual relationships than in the previous decades.~ ~
18   II,     9.  3.  3|         Study of Sexual Health and Relationships, most men who currently
19   II,     9.  3.  3|               age mixing in sexual relationships (women aged 15-19 who had
20   II,     9.  3.  3|         Study of Sexual Health and Relationships. Summary Report. Crisis
21   II,     9.  3.  3|         Study of Sexual Health and Relationships~MSM~Men having sex with
22   II,     9.  4.  3|           wellbeing such as social relationships, poverty and discrimination.
23   II,     9.  4.  3|            be either in monogamous relationships or relatively sexually inactive.
24   II,     9.  5.  3|           men, and within same sex relationships. One in 4 women and 1 in
25  III,    10.  1.  1|       There are different types of relationships between health determinants.
26  III,    10.  1.  1|          alcohol consumption, core relationships and social networks / peers
27  III,    10.  1.  1|       mediated by disturbed family relationships / family disharmony. The
28  III,    10.  1.  1| consumption in British men. Social relationships within the family or household
29  III,    10.  2.  1|           2, there are significant relationships between a 1 litre increase
30  III,    10.  2.  5|     adolescents‘ paternal and peer relationships, depression, and externalizing
31  III,    10.  3.  2|           epidemiology, the causal relationships for all of the actors is
32  III,    10.  4.  2|            evaluates doseresponse relationships for the most sensitive adverse
33  III,    10.  5.  3|            is that most employment relationships are informal and insecure,
34  III,    10.  5.  3|            tasks. Some contractual relationships have become more informal.
35  III,    10.  5.  3|           New Forms of Contractual Relationships and the Implications for
36  III,    10.  6.  1|         network refers to a set of relationships between individuals. Social
37  III,    10.  6.  1|          negative aspects of close relationships were found to have an increased
38  III,    10.  6.  1|         assist in developing other relationships later on. European adolescents
39  III,    10.  6.  1|         importance of new media in relationships. The use of electronic media,
40  III,    10.  6.  3|         Influencing close personal relationships and working to create healthy
41   IV,    11.  1.  6|      literature on principal-agent relationships as well as the literature
42   IV,    11.  1.  6|       context of multi-task agency relationships (Robinson et al, 2004).~ ~
43   IV,    11.  6.  5|      Incentives in Principal-Agent Relationships." Journal of Economic Perspectives
44   IV,    13.  6.  1|    self-confidence and with social relationships.~ ~The child, however, is