Even though the structural barriers have been removed, and women are allowed to participate within the legal system the invisible barriers remain as well as the question, to fit in or break the mould?
12.
Although many people think the original shouldn t be touched, Christian wanted to break the mould and instead of having hoards of mad Tiesto fans giving him grief, he ended up getting the 2001 rework released on Ti�sto s own Musical Freedom imprint.
13.
A result of this was that the civil service became regarded as retaining its British outlook until well into the 1950s, T . K . Whitaker was among a new generation of civil servants who would " break the mould " and cast off this image.
14.
He closed his review by saying " while Doctor Who shouldn't be like this every week, the show's boundless variety has always been its biggest selling point, and it's refreshing to see'The Girl Who Died'break the mould and dare to be entirely unpredictable and different ".
15.
To this, on July 1986, the Regional Centre of the Azores produced " Xailes Negros " ( a mini-series ) which attempted break the mould and provide dynamic fiction and storey-telling, from scratch, while other productions have moved to adapt pre-existing public literature and works by celebrated Azorean authors.
16.
He is also one of the few Muslims attempting to tackle sensitive issues which affect us all, one of the few who are treading on controversial ground, one of the few who are trying to rise above the limitations inherited by Muslims in the west and break the mould and the barriers of communication.
17.
In this its complexity was perhaps both a blessing and a curse without it, the film wouldn t have been what it is, but with it the ability to secure a wider audience in a movie world that is generally risk-averse when it comes to promoting films that break the mould was limited ".
18.
It was shortlisted in September 2016 for the Goldsmiths Prize ( alongside books by Rachel Cusk, Deborah Levy, Eimear McBride, Mike McCormack and Anakana Schofield ), " the first African novel to be considered for this prize ", which was set up to reward fiction that breaks the mould or extends the possibilities of the novel form.