Argued
in sentence
1563 examples of Argued in a sentence
Sociologists of religion have long
argued
that in a monolithic religious environment, or when religious institutions are closely tied to the state, the overall religiosity of the public declines.
But, as Amir Attaran, a professor of law and population health at the University of Ottawa,
argued
recently in the Harvard Public Health Review, the transmission of dengue fever, a virus that is related to Zika and transmitted by the same species of mosquito, declines but does not cease in the Rio winter.
I
argued
and voted against these new nuclear initiatives in the US Senate earlier this year.
Many economists outside of China have
argued
that the December depreciation resulted from betting by investors that Chinese policymakers, facing the prospect of a hard landing for the economy, would slow or halt currency appreciation.
Trump
argued
in speeches before large crowds that Curiel could not be fair to him because he is “a Mexican” (Curiel was born in Indiana).
The United States, it was argued, needed to begin to think about war differently.
But the new strategic doctrine of “preemption,” which many
argued
would define war-making in the twenty-first century, suggests that democracies also fight in dread.
In a recent article, the Dutch economist Sweder van Wijnbergen
argued
that addressing the eurozone’s economic woes would require debt reduction and an investment program.
In my 2003 book The New Financial Order, I
argued
in favor of privately issued “livelihood insurance,” which protects against long-term loss of income and sets premiums on the basis of occupation and training.
China’s role in African economies has been criticized; but, as I have
argued
before, Chinese investment has also been a lifeline to many on the continent.
In June 2012, Skidelsky
argued
that “since May 2010, when US and British fiscal policy diverged, the US economy has grown – albeit slowly.
In his The Age of Extremes, Eric Hobsbawm
argued
that the greatest change in the West in the 20 th century was the vast reduction in the number of people employed as farmers.
I have
argued
elsewhere that the accumulation of reserves, despite its economic costs, gave Brazil political leverage internationally, by reducing its dependence on multilateral organizations.
The logic of the American mission to spread freedom around the globe – rooted, it was argued, in US history since the Founding Fathers – demanded nothing less.
It has also been
argued
that leaders should not have to be “bribed” into being good.
More than half a century ago, the godfather of artificial intelligence, Alan Turing,
argued
that the brain’s function could all be reduced to mathematics and that, someday, a computer would rival human intelligence.
In an article last year in the US journal Foreign Affairs , Alan Blinder, a former advisor to President Bill Clinton and Vice-Chair of the US Federal Reserve Board,
argued
that the process of globalization has the potential to cause massive job loss in the future.
The international community agrees that ending the conflict is in everyone’s interest – France has long
argued
for a new resolution, and Russia has no incentive to oppose one.
These same Republicans also
argued
for government spending restraint while blocking the institutional changes to Congressional procedures needed to make spending restraint possible.
(As James Kwak and I
argued
in our book 13 Bankers, what really mattered was the decades-long bipartisan process of deregulation, for which the end of Glass-Steagall was a prominent symbol.)
Most economists rejected these “revisionist” views, and
argued
that Japan’s current-account surplus was large because its national saving rate was high, which reflected demographics, not cultural differences or government policies.
His targets were the IMF, the OECD, the LSE, and all the other covens of economists who
argued
that leaving the European Union would damage the British economy.
Some have
argued
that the blame for the referendum’s outcome lies with economists themselves, because they were unable to speak a language that ordinary people could understand.
Deeper financial market liberalization, it is argued, would better discipline the real economy and lead to more efficient capital allocation.
Many people, including me, who had
argued
against the FA program in 1999 – mostly for its inconsistencies, contradictions, and fiscally irresponsible assumptions – were by 2004 willing to vote for it.
Larry Summers and other thoughtful observers have long
argued
that the US could use more investment in roads, bridges, and ports, and that at today’s record-low long-term interest rates, such investments would pay for themselves.
One camp
argued
that it would be reckless to create a monetary union before economic policies had converged and institutional reforms were complete.
In 2007, Putin addressed the Olympic Committee (in English), and persuasively
argued
that the Games will “play a major role in Russia’s future.
Modi also
argued
for a new economic-growth model based on export-oriented manufacturing.
I
argued
that, as many Islamic scholars have recognized, Islamic jurisprudence is compatible with democratic values.
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