Authors
in sentence
421 examples of Authors in a sentence
Both
authors
based their arguments on an assessment of the underlying context – that is, the structure – of world power.
In fact, the
authors
may have got their analysis right, just for the wrong country.
When confronted with their exaggerations, the
authors
claimed that “if you reduce hazardous air pollution, it is difficult to not also reduce warming emissions.”
Royal DSM (which is led by one of the authors) has set a carbon price of €50 ($59) per ton, joining other global companies like Michelin, Danone, and General Motors in applying meaningful carbon prices to “future-proof” their business.
The pamphlet’s two authors, Richard Lambert, a former editor of the Financial Times and future Director General of the Confederation of British Industry, and Nick Butler, the Group Vice President for Strategy and Policy Development at British Petroleum do not represent vested academic interests.
The need for a free and well-functioning market economy is not included, though this is the fundamental pre-condition for the high standards of living and social protection that the document's
authors
advocate so resolutely.
It will be no surprise that one of the
authors
is thinking hard about the role that heavily_endowed non_profit educational institutions can play in resolving the dilemmas of innovation and intellectual property in the new economy.
Aside from the need to act, however, the
authors
agree on little else.
The
authors
of “The Urban Water Blueprint” have calculated that more than $18 billion could be productively directed toward conservation activities, saving cities money and creating a new market comparable in size to the market for the water sector’s existing technologies.
Countless
authors
view it as a tragedy that broke the flow of history and destroyed Russia’s best people.
For example, to ensure transparency, scientific journals require
authors
to declare conflicts of interest.
Others have reported on an official order to ban the publication or sale of books by
authors
who support the Hong Kong protests, human-rights activism, and the rule of law.
Among the banned
authors
is the economist Mao Yushi, who received the Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty in 2012.
The
authors
claim this would boost economic growth, despite the fact that similar cuts in the past (for example, under President George W. Bush) had no such effect.
The Trump plan concedes that the tax cut per se would reduce revenue by at least $2.6 trillion over ten years – and its
authors
are willing to cite the non-partisan Tax Foundation on this point.
Reading between the lines, the
authors
think little of the sectoral model, but their anticlimactic conclusion is only that “it looks worthwhile to regularly conduct assessments of the functioning of the supervisory architecture in each jurisdiction in the light of prevailing objectives.”
The
authors
were clearly mindful that every academic paper worth its salt ends with a plea for more research.
The cumulative supply shortfall – the
authors
estimate that potential output is now 7% below the pre-2007 trajectory – may be larger than the current output shortfall attributable to the ongoing lack of aggregate demand.
For starters, East Africa’s political leaders must put aside their penchant for what the
authors
of the SID report call “social bribery” – delivering the promise of progress without the results.
In a rare challenge to the government, Beijing-based writer Yu Jie, one of the petition's authors, wrote that China ought to support the war on Iraq.
The authors’ research builds on prior work by Gilens, who painstakingly collected public-opinion polls on nearly 2,000 policy questions from 1981 to 2002.
For example, the
authors
of The Limits to Growth predicted that before 2013, the world would have run out of aluminum, copper, gold, lead, mercury, molybdenum, natural gas, oil, silver, tin, tungsten, and zinc.
The Limits of Growth got it so wrong because its
authors
overlooked the greatest resource of all: our own resourcefulness.
This commentary reflects the authors’ personal views, not those of the Oesterreichische Nationalbank or the Eurosystem.
In their excellent book Dollar and Yen , Ronald McKinnon and Kenici Ohno provide an answer: the recurrence of endaka fukyo , a "strong yen recession," which the
authors
attribute to a "strong yen syndrome" rooted in persistent trade frictions between the US and Japan.
In contrast, the Center for American Progress report devoted very little space to financial-sector reform – in the authors’ view, such issues hardly seem to be a high priority.
(The
authors
wish to thank Ivetta Gerasimchuk and Martin Dietrich Brauch of the IISD for their help with this commentary.)
The
authors
conclude that France's commitment to universal rights is belied by deepening discrimination against immigrants, "who have been ostracized and concentrated in bad schools, poor neighborhoods, positions without job security, and fake job training."
Given this, the report’s
authors
argue, the US needs “a new grand strategy” toward China that focuses on balancing – rather than supporting – the country’s ascendancy.
Collaboration between companies and educational institutions, as AT&T (on whose board one of the
authors
serves), Starbucks, and other firms are showing, can provide workers with the new or enhanced skills that are increasingly needed.
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