Address
in sentence
4040 examples of Address in a sentence
In September, when UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon convenes a summit in New York to renew the drive toward reaching the MDGs, the world leaders in attendance should endorse their use to
address
MDG priorities in areas other than health.
But, faced with a complex picture, states have tended to
address
the flow of migrants they deem undesirable by saying, in effect, “out of sight, out of mind.”
Member states are divided on how to
address
this, and recent discussions in Brussels have only begun to make some progress.
And, as the US and the broader international community attempt to
address
the unfolding events, it would be a mistake to leave the peace process off the agenda.
Those who claim that redistribution can adequately
address
this problem must
address
the fact that the “losers” of free trade have so far received little, if any, compensation.
But it is dangerous to think that the UN can
address
today’s complex problems without the full backing of its member states.
While the AMF’s benchmark isn’t designed to
address
all ten, it does touch on the areas that are most relevant to the health-care industry.
But even when currency misalignment is relatively clear, trade agreements are not the right way to
address
it.
Simply put, Europe’s nation states are too small to
address
a crisis of this dimension on their own.
Unfortunately, many of the proposed “green” substitutions, however well intentioned, may not
address
these limitations adequately and could, in fact, produce worse outcomes.
To secure that future, Europe’s political class, rather than struggling to cope with crises as they arise, must begin to look at the big picture, anticipate and
address
challenges, and inspire people once again.
Such a reckoning will not be quick or easy, not least because it will require us to
address
the many issues that have been swept under the carpet over the years, as half-baked projects were foisted on the EU to implement.
It is time for Europe’s leaders to break the decades-old habit of pursuing half-baked projects that blunt the symptoms of crises, and to implement real reforms that
address
the root causes.
With regard to domestic policy, the failures began even earlier: from Reaganomics in the 1980s to Obamacare in the 2010s, major policies have often overpromised and underperformed, while failing to
address
underlying problems.
First, although Europe might be able to scrape through the current crisis on austerity alone, it would be left ill-equipped to
address
deeper structural shortcomings, to say nothing of making progress on fiscal, banking, and political union.
Also on Thursday, before heading to the G20 summit in Hamburg, Germany, Trump will
address
the Polish people.
There may be a silver lining to this infuriating story: the recent investigation that exposed Exxon’s deceit could end up catalyzing the action needed to
address
the looming climate crisis.
European arrangements must not weaken countries’ incentives to
address
the challenges facing them – and that means exercising extreme caution when it comes to bailing out eurozone economies.
Trump reinforced this view with his stark inaugural address, in which he asserted a “right of all nations to put their own interests first.”
Fortunately, financial markets are beginning to
address
longevity risk.
In fact, creating such a market is the most important step we can take to
address
longevity risk, for we could then discover its true price, allowing myriad business decisions involving longevity to be made more efficiently.
President Mohamed Morsi’s government struggled to
address
Egypt’s inherited economic and social crises in the face of the enormous public expectations created by the 2011 revolution, whose protagonists sought not only freedom, but also economic development and social justice.
We also need policies that
address
the interconnections among technology, governance, and ethics.
It needs to rethink how to
address
financial stability in its day-to-day work with members.
The nuclear deal is not the “grand bargain” that Iran proposed to the US in 2003 and that was supposed to address, in addition to the nuclear dispute, a wide array of regional issues, including the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
WASHINGTON – Barack Obama began his second term as US President with an inaugural
address
that presented a broad vision of American government.
In Europe, the prevailing reaction highlights that, between the lines, America’s first self-proclaimed “Pacific president” delivered the most “European” inaugural
address
in recent memory.
The
address
also embraced social welfare (“The commitments we make to each other through Medicare and Medicaid and Social Security, these things do not sap our initiative, they strengthen us”) and the idea of fraternité (“preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires collective action”).
For those who see Obama becoming more “European,” the climax of the speech was his mention of the “threat of climate change” – again, for the first time in an American inaugural
address.
The last reference to international institutions in an inaugural
address
was President John F. Kennedy’s pledge to support the United Nations in 1961.
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