Borders
in sentence
1911 examples of Borders in a sentence
What, then, can other countries, and individuals, whether in the US or beyond its borders, do about the fact that Trump is jeopardizing the future of us all, for many generations to come?
After all, it was a Republican who produced the Reagan Plan, calling on Israel to withdraw to the 1967
borders.
But the impact of anti-immigrant sentiment extends far beyond national
borders.
From 2010 to 2014, European states spent more than €1 billion ($1.1 billion) on walls and
borders.
Increasingly open
borders
have made it easier for businesses to find the cheapest locations for their operations.
Digital
borders
and obstacles to data flows might be erected to meet demands for privacy at a moment when the world needs data to flow freely.
Second, these financial rescue and assistance packages cannot stop at the
borders
of the richest countries.
For several decades after World War II, Europe could afford to overlook what went on beyond its borders: security was the business of the United States.
Terrorism may spread to Germany, and refugees may move across
borders.
Otherwise, the failure to address common risks and challenges may well result in citizens placing exclusive faith in the nation-state, rejecting solidarity, and calling for the permanent restoration of national
borders.
Any effort to close economies – much less
borders
– would fail disastrously.
After ten years of a large-scale repression, the fire, far from going out, is spreading, crossing borders, setting Northern Caucasus ablaze and making combatants even more fierce.
The absence of a framework that addresses the factors driving migration leaves politicians free to attend to their domestic markets, with little thought to the negative political and economic externalities that may be wreaking havoc outside their
borders.
No one knows what Trump has in mind in terms of Syria’s future
borders
or governance.
What about its
borders?
Yet some in Europe seem to believe that erecting barbed-wire fences along
borders
(Hungary) or closing ports to ships full of refugees (Italy and Malta) is justified.
On migration, for example, it must work as one to strengthen its own borders, while helping, through development assistance and security cooperation, the countries from which people are fleeing.
If Europe’s biggest problem is that it is divided along national borders, then liberal-leaning countries like France and Germany could try to change the balance of power within increasingly illiberal countries.
Opening
borders
completely could produce gains as high as $39 trillion for the world economy over 25 years.
Of course, plenty of the risks Europe faces lie within its own
borders.
Even when genocide remains contained within borders, the violence eventually tends to spill over into neighboring states, igniting regional wars, undermining global stability, and eventually costing billions as the world starts to tend to the humanitarian byproducts of slaughter.
No matter how strong the EU’s external
borders
are – though, of course, better monitoring and patrolling measures are needed – the flow of migrants will continue to overwhelm their capacity, endangering the openness that is so fundamental to European unification, beginning with the Schengen acquis, which guarantees freedom of movement, without border controls, among 26 European countries.
At the same time, efforts are needed to strengthen deterrence near and en route to Europe’s borders, through partnerships with major source and transit countries.
Even while trade expands, China is attempting to confine India within greatly foreshortened land and sea
borders
through its so-called “string of pearls policy.”
Maintaining our economy requires migration and open EU
borders
– and facing down the populist movements in Europe that would shun “outsiders.”
Tunisia is relatively homogeneous ethnically and lacks sharp sectarian divisions; nonetheless, owing partly to its porous
borders
with Algeria and Libya, the specter of violence is always present.
And now, in response to the crisis,
borders
are being reinstated in the Schengen Area, which not too long ago symbolized European unity and freedom of movement for its citizens.
Inevitably, new
borders
will lead to the creation of large refugee camps in member states like Greece.
It is one thing to modify the behavior of a state beyond its borders, but quite another to alter what takes place within another country’s territory.
These include restrictive regulations that reduce firms’ ability to undertake new activities or enter new markets, especially across
borders.
Back
Next
Related words
Across
Their
Within
National
Countries
Beyond
Would
Which
Country
People
World
Other
International
States
State
Political
Could
Global
There
Refugees