Accountable
in sentence
577 examples of Accountable in a sentence
Second, in order to be legitimate and accountable, the work of research ethics committees must be informed by a diversity of views.
This autonomy has served science well, and independent and
accountable
science has served society and the economy well.
By clarifying what surveillance entails, the new decision should help the IMF and its members see eye to eye on the Fund’s role, help those involved in surveillance do their job properly, and make the Fund more
accountable
for delivering on this key responsibility.
It is doubtful that this Duma will be able to pass necessary constitutional reforms aimed at restricting the President's power and making Parliament and the President more
accountable.
Like government, however, companies are ultimately run by people in order to serve people; they must therefore also be
accountable
to people.
The best way to ensure that the IMF’s management is
accountable
to all of its governmental shareholders is to prevent the top job from becoming the sinecure of any region, whether Europe or Asia.
One of those international organizations is the World Bank Group, which engages with countries to help protect the poor and vulnerable, improve resilience to refugee and migration shocks, and ensure inclusive and
accountable
service delivery.
For that, they need to be held
accountable.
That, in turn, implies that it is
accountable
and that it has democratic legitimacy – something fundamentally lacking in multilateral agencies such as the World Bank.
There is an important debate taking place in our country about how best to organize the health-care system so that it is
accountable
for serving the poorest and most marginalized communities.
As the case of Hungary showed, ultimately it is up to citizens to hold governments
accountable
and ensure that tax and tariff policies work for the benefit of all.
As I explain in my new book Technocracy in America, a direct technocracy would ensure that regular public consultation shapes decision-making by committees of
accountable
experts.
They will point out that they, too, are
accountable
primarily to their own people.
The management team would be held
accountable
for its performance by a board of investors, comprising representatives of countries that provide the funding and scientists who provide the intellectual capital.
Policymakers are accountable, first and foremost, to their constituents, whose unique needs they must meet.
Central banks, while ideally independent from political influence, are nonetheless
accountable
to the body politic.
This – together with other critical interventions, such as the provision of clean water and effective sanitation facilities – will require a strong and sustained political commitment, one that civil society and the media, by keeping their governments accountable, can help to secure.
The US Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the landmark legislation now widely known as “Obamacare”) aims to widen coverage, while so-called
accountable
care organizations, such as Kaiser Permanente, try to contain costs by aligning the interests of providers and payers.
ASEAN needs to grow into a strong, politically accountable, European Union-style community.
While leaders have met at two previous Summits, they still have not delivered what the world needs to achieve robust and lasting confidence: a global system for securing nuclear materials that holds all states
accountable
to a set of common standards and best practices.
Critics argue that a global nuclear-materials security system – one that sets standards, monitors practices, and holds governments
accountable
– cannot be achieved without compromising the very security information that it was designed to protect.
As our leaders convene to discuss the issue, let us hold them
accountable
for achieving the goal of securing all weapons-usable nuclear materials before the summit process ends in 2016.
In a representative democracy, elections are the ultimate instrument for holding politicians
accountable.
But they are
accountable
to citizens at home, in national elections, and they are primarily judged for their domestic performance, not for EU decisions.
Since EU policymakers have a narrow mandate and their decisions are often inspired by external technical criteria, they can be held
accountable
for their behavior despite the absence of elections.
If the mandate is so incomplete that it leaves too much room for discretional judgment, there is only one way to hold policymakers accountable: through democratic elections.
These three trends overlap in a group of about 15 African countries that are strongly committed to
accountable
governance and sensible economic policies.
Let Afghans Lead Afghan ReformNEW YORK – Although the outcome remains uncertain, Afghanistan’s presidential election has demonstrated that the Afghan people yearn for more
accountable
leadership.
The best way to help make Afghanistan’s government more
accountable
to its people over the long term is by working to strengthen Afghan democracy, but this level of accountability is still far off – and Afghanistan desperately needs better governance now.
Now, action must be taken to avoid renewed violence; the politicians who incited and funded the bloodshed must be held
accountable.
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