go hand in hand with – English Translation – Keybot Dictionary

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  alumni.sharjah.ac.ae  
go hand in hand with sth idiom
go a long way toward(s) doing sth idiom
  www.invista.com  
“We were pleased to collaborate with them to engineer cutting-edge woven CORDURA® Combat Wool™ fabrics that help us take on life’s battles -comfortably, durably, and stylishly. Fashion and function go hand in hand with this new portfolio, and we were honored to work with such a leader in textile technologies to develop our new high performance woven Merino wool CORDURA® fabric collection.”
INVISTA’s CORDURA® brand essence celebrates individual durability: As Long As The World Is Full Of Durable People, We’ll Keep Making Durable Fabrics™. Known for its resistance to abrasions, tears and scuffs, CORDURA® fabric is a primary ingredient in many of the world’s leading high-performance gear and apparel products ranging from luggage, upholstery and backpacks to footwear, military equipment, tactica  wear, workwear and performance apparel. The CORDURA® brand is a registered trademark of INVISTA, one of the world’s largest integrated polymer, intermediates and fibers businesses. To distinguish the CORDURA® brand, the word “CORDURA®” must be spelled out in all caps in and used with an ®, and it must be followed by the word “brand” or “fabric.”
  www.royalview.com.hk  
Gender is understood here as a social category of difference alongside others like sexual orientation and ethnicity. As all of them participate in the creation of knowledge and thereby power, they go hand in hand with the hierarchisation of subjects and the attribution of identity.
The exhibition PERFORMING CHANGE is based on the fundamental assumption that norms and the human perception of reality are a construct and therefore eminently transformable. Thus the starting point for the newly created works of the exhibition is multifaceted: the exposure and transformation of social power structures, the production and preservation of knowledge and the individual role of the artist. With regard to gender roles in particular, Dutch artist Mathilde ter Heijne explores strategies that perceive and seek to change the relationship between the visible and the invisible within social power structures. Gender is understood here as a social category of difference alongside others like sexual orientation and ethnicity. As all of them participate in the creation of knowledge and thereby power, they go hand in hand with the hierarchisation of subjects and the attribution of identity. Ter Heijne challenges the interpretative authority of social discourse about what is deemed true or false by posing a set of fundamental questions: who is visible in what context, who is heard and who (or what) causes others to act_