Abroad
in sentence
1698 examples of Abroad in a sentence
Abe recognizes the new challenges posed by proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism, and has acknowledged the rising expectation, at home and abroad, that Japan’s contribution to international security must grow.
Uganda’s foreign ministry says the agreement is part of its mandate to promote the country’s interests
abroad
through the transfer of skills and technology, as well as an opportunity to earn foreign exchange by sourcing employment for its citizens.
That way, developing countries like Uganda could not only train more health-care professionals, but also have funds to send workers
abroad
for training.
The ultimate solution is not to discourage professionals from working abroad; it is to ensure better training and more amenable working conditions.
Most obvious is the new European General Staff now being formed in Belgium, whose work will inevitably duplicate what NATO already does, while adding yet another military bureaucracy, with its administrative support, extra pay and allowances for service abroad, mass of documents in two languages and more.
My own research, carried out with Zhuan Xie and Xiaobo Zhang, shows that Chinese firms – especially in the private sector – have lately accelerated innovation, and are being awarded an increasing number of patents at home and
abroad.
For Schmitt, this view leads to disaster, both at home and
abroad.
There can be no doubting, for example, that China has a keen interest in allocating its vast stockpile of savings to productive use on projects undertaken
abroad.
With Chinese companies no longer able to sell a rapidly increasing volume of products
abroad
and support further expansion of productive capacity, the economy has lost some important growth, employment, and wage engines.
A surprise devaluation last August has been followed by a number of lower daily fixes in the onshore exchange rate, all intended to make Chinese goods more attractive abroad, while accelerating import substitution at home.
But critics of Bush at home and
abroad
must also realize that, notwithstanding past mistakes, pursuing a common strategy is essential, because terrorism is here to stay.
And there are enough intelligent people in and outside Washington who realize this and need allies from
abroad
to help them turn the current mood around.
China’s New Normal and America’s Old HabitsNEW HAVEN – China is generating a lot of confusion nowadays, both at home, where senior officials now tout the economy’s “new normal,” and abroad, exemplified by America’s embrace of Cold War-style tactics to contain China’s rise.
Too adventuresome a policy would jeopardize China’s gains at home and
abroad.
While macroeconomic indicators remain strong, many are worried about rising interest rates, slowing growth abroad, and late-cycle economic and market tendencies.
Should Bush, a lame duck president with little support at home and less abroad, now be allowed to appoint the next World Bank president?
To prevent this, the report again usefully deviates from reigning orthodoxy, which tells countries to identify and copy “best practices” from
abroad.
A large burden has been placed on those who actually pay their taxes, while many – often the wealthiest, who long ago stashed their money
abroad
– continue to evade their obligations.
All this signaled to allies
abroad
and citizens at home that Britain's cooperation should not be taken for granted, that it requires domestic approval.
Fear of “Talibanization” of the Caucasus prompted the Kremlin’s recent announcement that Russian Muslims should be protected from extremist propaganda from abroad, and that Russian Muslim education and spiritual life should be controlled in order to direct them away from extremism.
Nor is it inherently unreasonable – despite opposition at home and
abroad
– for his government to seek to reinterpret Article 9 of Japan’s “peace constitution” to permit wider engagement in collective self-defense operations and military cooperation with allies and partners.
While publicly proclaiming their patriotism, other members of China’s ruling elites are stashing their ill-gotten wealth
abroad
and sending their children to elite Western schools and universities.
Instead, the MENA region has some of the world’s highest rates of youth unemployment, leading to the world’s largest brain drain, as educated young people seek opportunities
abroad.
They bought commodities whose domestic prices were kept low by state regulation and resold them
abroad
shielded by export regulations.
Following the disturbances in Tibet and the troubles affecting the Olympic torch’s progress around the world, some voices
abroad
are showing a greater inclination to dismiss, vilify, humiliate, or even split China.
Long-term success still depends on what happens at home rather than
abroad.
It’s the other way around: the more strongly we organize to stay the course and reinforce action to halt global warming and promote sustainability, the more likely it will be that pragmatic members of the new majority can minimize the damage at home and
abroad.
Despite that setback, China remains the world’s biggest dam builder at home and
abroad.
Moreover, by using a Chinese workforce to build dams and other projects
abroad
– a practice that runs counter to its own “localization” requirement, adopted in 2006 – China reinforces a perception that it is engaged in exploitative practices.
Lacking in domestic savings and wanting to grow, the US must import surplus savings from abroad, and run massive current-account deficits to attract the foreign capital.
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