Calls
in sentence
2192 examples of Calls in a sentence
The UN’s Gaza peace resolution (which Britain authored)
calls
on the Israeli government to open up the supply lines, but this has been heeded only in small part.
It is surely true that the buildup of debt in China
calls
for close monitoring, and that corporate deleveraging, which is urgently required, “should be accompanied by a strengthening of banks and social safety nets, especially for displaced workers in overcapacity sectors.”
The resolution
calls
upon developed countries and international organizations to offer financial support, capacity-building assistance, and technology transfer to countries in need – especially in the developing world – thereby helping them to provide for their populations clean and affordable drinking water and basic sanitation.
What the United Nations
calls
the "century of urbanization" will require creativity and imagination, innovations and not brute brick walls or even more subtle security frontiers.
A consensus has gradually emerged around this idea, with
calls
for a shift toward intensive, efficiency-driven growth intensifying since China’s GDP growth began to slow in 2011.
Over the past 30 years, intermittent
calls
by the United States for limited political reform were largely rebuffed.
On the other, there is what Harvard’s Yascha Mounk calls, in his newly published book, “undemocratic liberalism”: regimes that protect individual rights and legal equality, but delegate public policymaking to unelected technocratic bodies like central banks and the European Commission.
Despite
calls
in some Israeli media for Gaza to be bombed “back to the stone age,” the Israeli government seems to accept that that would be wrong.
Moreover, as
calls
for harmonization increase, policies converge across the globe.
Obviously, all of this
calls
for a lot more investigation.
In his 2011 book The Globalization Paradox, Harvard’s Dani Rodrik says that the nation-state, democracy, and globalization are mutually irreconcilable: we can have any two, but not all three simultaneously (he
calls
this a “trilemma”).
There are encouraging initial signs that Sarkozy is ignoring
calls
from the neo- liberal camp for revolutionary change.
Such harassment is the everyday stuff of journalism in what Vladimir Putin
calls
the “post-Soviet space.”
Accordingly, NATO’s new Strategic Concept, adopted at the November 2010 Lisbon summit,
calls
on the Alliance to become more versatile in order to counter novel threats from geographically and technologically diverse sources.
The latter approach, which has been endorsed by the UN Human Rights Council,
calls
on farmers to share their existing knowledge and seeds with one another other, and to protect local ecosystems.
But he has foresworn trying to change Trump’s behavior – from his unpredictable but often consequential tweets, to
calls
made on a personal phone from his private quarters (so that Kelly couldn’t monitor or listen in).
One conservative estimate – which has a reasonable chance of being accepted precisely because it is conservative –
calls
for $50 billion per year as of 2015, increasing to $100 billion by 2020 and beyond.
What this
calls
for, above all, is prevention of nuclear proliferation (beginning with Iran), whether through diplomacy and sanctions, or, if need be, through sabotage and military attacks.
Counter-terrorism against groups such as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (which now
calls
itself simply the “Islamic State”) – whether by drones, small raids, or the training and arming of local partners – must become a staple of policy.
In the United States, President George W. Bush
calls
his dream the “ownership society.”
In particular, the so-called Washington Consensus, which
calls
for unfettered liberalization and privatization, and macroeconomic policies that focus on inflation, rather than employment and growth, have attracted much criticism over the years.
This has contributed to the rejection of trade openness and
calls
for protectionism.
These are all difficult
calls
to make, which is why any US administration should pause before shutting individuals, firms, and countries out of the dollar-trading system.
Beyond enduring untold suffering and violence, many of today’s refugees, from war-torn countries like Iraq and Syria, have imbibed radical Islamist ideology and, specifically,
calls
to jihad.
The Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman has poured scorn on what he
calls
the “confidence fairy,” the claim that fiscal policy must command the support of the bond markets.
Rising “soft” dictators – what the journalist Bobby Ghosh
calls
authoritarian democrats – have used these feelings of unease and alienation to attract votes.
That
calls
for a system that will return their investment and more over time, which means that investors will design a city that helps its citizen/taxpayers to prosper.
Doing so
calls
for a framework of what I call “constructive realism.”
The first
calls
for unhindered exchange and interaction with Trumpist views.
Yet May’s government is probably going to secure the opposite outcome: control over immigration, but at the cost of what she
calls
a “clean break” with the single market.
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