Mater et magistra
§ 1 40 | network of public and private institutions, in which all economic activity
2 60 | movements, associations and institutions with economic, cultural,
3 99 | public authorities and by institutions which tackle the various
4 99 | these public authorities and institutions bring the workers into their
5 179| improve their own temporal institutions and environment. They do
6 179| they can to prevent these institutions from doing violence to human
7 223| in some of these latter institutions, this has been done for
8 256| conduct of human affairs and institutions is not to rob these of the
Pacem in terris
§ 9 36 | culture, economics, social institutions, political movements and
10 46 | authority, preserve its institutions and do all that is necessary
11 125| characteristics and timehonored civil institutions. They must also repudiate
12 136| its end. Hence the civil institutions in which such authority
13 136| efficacy which make such institutions capable of realizing the
14 147| themselves in the work of these institutions, and strive to influence
15 151| the present time, civil institutions evince a high degree of
16 151| must be owned that these institutions are often but slightly affected
17 152| contributing-to the creation of these institutions are men who are professed
18 156| organizations, insurance, cultrual institutions, the law, politics, medical
19 161| any improvement in human institutions, the work must be done slowly
Princeps pastorum
§ 20 19 | customs and traditional institutions of the people . . .; she
21 23 | everything connected with the institutions peculiar to their countries,
22 39 | their means, their churches, institutions, and clergy, who are entirely
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