0 present participle of eschew
1 to avoid something intentionally, or to give something up:
We won't have discussions with this group unless they eschew violence.
The findings underscore the importance of measuring self- and other-blame separately and eschewing forcedchoice or polarized formats to measure causal or responsibility judgments.
He handles with care the matter of secularization, eschewing any assertion that religion was losing potency.
Moreover, we need to show that those reasons are more powerful than any reasons they might have for eschewing justice and acting on other dispositions.
She owes us a theory explaining which groups deserve this treatment and which do not, while eschewing the bad features of liberal justice.
However, if at some remote past we started as equals, in the important respects, how do we account for the eschewing inequities?
Most chapters are tightly focused on urban policy, by and large eschewing theory in place of the analysis of policies, governance and strategies.
But this disregards how the very process of eschewing outside ideas can itself define debate and shape the formation of specific policies.
Despite eschewing positivistic theories of urban growth and the paradigm of problem and response, the old historiography creeps into the collection.