Approaches
in sentence
972 examples of Approaches in a sentence
But it should force us to consider whether the cure is costlier than the disease – and ask what other
approaches
might be better.
Experience with alcohol suggests that these
approaches
may modestly reduce, but not eliminate, the harms associated with use, especially if sellers are allowed to promote their wares.
In fact, disagreement – and the deeper insights that result from it – enables new
approaches
to scientific understanding.
But on issues like jobs, hospitals, schools, and the welfare state, their
approaches
contrasted sharply.
For their efforts, Waigi and Mbowa won the 2015 Zambezi Prize, which recognizes innovative
approaches
to promoting financial inclusion.
The euro zone’s less competitive economies are tethered to monetary policy (interest rates) set by the ECB, but pursue diverse
approaches
to bank bailouts and fiscal stimulus.
There is also the potential for reforming inefficient
approaches
to food and agriculture, particularly in Europe.
The proposal has the capacity to act as a catalyst for adapting policy
approaches
to current realities; but it is subject to the dulling forces of twentieth-century mindsets and institutions that are too slow to adapt to twenty-first-century challenges and opportunities.
The European Council and Commission should bear this in mind as the June 2016 deadline to submit the strategy
approaches.
But, in developingsuch innovative
approaches
to emissions reductions, we must always specify theoptimal feedstock for each product, and find the right balance between fossilfeedstock and renewable resources.
The question of America’s role in helping to produce a more benign world in 2030 has important implications for President Barack Obama as he
approaches
his second term.
But if any region would benefit from the Obama doctrine, which promises to shift from military to more political
approaches
to regional problems, it is East Asia.
The US and China’s irreconcilable
approaches
are not good for anyone.
With issues concerning international trade, investment, competition, and intellectual property rights increasingly linked, global
approaches
that can address them in a holistic way have become vital.
LONDON – As the tenth anniversary of the start of the global financial crisis approaches, a wave of retrospective reviews is bearing down on us.
In an April editorial in the journal Science , Nina Fedoroff, an eminent plant geneticist who serves as senior scientific advisor to US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, wrote: “A new Green Revolution demands a global commitment to creating a modern agricultural infrastructure everywhere, adequate investment in training and modern laboratory facilities, and progress toward simplified regulatory
approaches
that are responsive to accumulating evidence of safety.
Indeed, in terms of foreign policy, my government is discarding extreme
approaches.
New methods were developed to measure their impact; new
approaches
were introduced to account for the possibility that the multiplier could vary over time; and new data were compiled to incorporate better actual budgetary decisions.
In some countries – for example, Italy, Japan, and the United States – politics will remain the primary driver of economic-policy
approaches.
For example, more coherent and generous
approaches
to the provision of temporary work visas would benefit both migrants and Europeans.
But, in order to build the disease networks of tomorrow, we will need to move beyond the current linear
approaches
to science and to how scientists work.
It is shocking how their free-market fundamentalism (or simply ideological opposition to aid of any kind) can blind them to life-and-death needs and the efficacy of practical
approaches
that are well known to health professionals.
Both
approaches
suggest that accounting for these types of activities could add between one-third and two-thirds of a percentage point to the average annual growth rate of the UK economy over the past decade.
The impact is particularly noticeable in eastern Germany, which already suffered from a gender imbalance – the male-to-female ratio among the younger cohorts
approaches
115:100 in most parts of the region – because educated women have a much higher propensity than men to move to western Germany for higher-paid jobs.
But this approach runs counter to medical history, in which advances come only after practitioners notice anomalies, discover flaws in current “best practices,” or improve on existing
approaches.
But considerable resources are being channeled toward ineffective
approaches
or – worse – programs that have been proved not to work.
The effectiveness of
approaches
like this one is limited by the fact that the three largest cyberspace powers – the United States, China, and Russia – have not agreed on a common treaty to harmonize national laws or facilitate cooperation.
But the world also needs far bolder solutions than twentieth-century
approaches
like limited asylum quotas and “temporary” refugee camps.
That is why we formed the LancetCommission on pollution and health: to marshal comprehensive data on pollution’s health effects, estimate its economic costs, pinpoint its links to poverty, and propose concrete
approaches
to addressing it.
With such a poor track record, there is a need for soul-searching and openness to other
approaches.
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