Calls
in sentence
2192 examples of Calls in a sentence
But if the blogosphere emits jingoistic
calls
for more raw materials, the government salutes and works harder to obtain them.
But its consistent preference for lining up on the other side of the divide – even when doing so runs counter to its own national interests –
calls
into question whether it has the internal fortitude to be a leader.
It also
calls
for universal access to clean water and sanitation (SDG6) and the creation of healthy and sustainable cities (SDG11).
More than 70% of the electorate boycotted the fraudulent vote, heeding
calls
by the Venezuelan opposition and many other democratic governments worldwide.
Many doctors would like to think of pain as a simple sensation that usefully
calls
disease or injury to our attention.
Gubernatorial elections this November will force Kurdish political contenders to offer opposing programs, and some candidates will seek electoral advantage via populist
calls
for independence.
The government made seven assertions about what it
calls
the “Soros Plan.”
Its latest strategic plan
calls
for a self-sufficiency ratio of 45% by 2015 and focuses instead on “securing the stability of food imports” through diversification and free-trade agreements.
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends a broader strategy - called DOTS - that
calls
for government commitment to TB control, including adequate diagnostic testing, continuous drug supply, and a proper system for recording, reporting, and assessing results.
But in the real world, we have to make tough calls, considering what we are willing to sacrifice for the greater good.
Thus,
calls
for more popular participation are not essential to populism; rather, they are a symptom of perceived exclusion (which might well be a reality, especially in Latin America).
Right now, Bush’s
calls
for democracy are heard as an imperial imposition of American institutions.
We need less Wilsonian rhetoric about making the world safe for democracy, unless combined with John F. Kennedy’s
calls
to “make the world safe for diversity.”ampnbsp;
Its preamble, which opens with the phrase “We, the Egyptian people,” can be read as a scathing attack on Egypt’s current political order, and
calls
for an end to fear and despotism.
A free press delivers truth, holds power to account, and
calls
out threats to liberty and justice.
Everywhere outside Paris,
calls
for decentralization and regionalism grow.
In Lebanon, the leader of Hezbollah, backed by Iran and Syria, merely
calls
for the Egyptian government’s overthrow.
Blanchard
calls
on Greece’s government to offer “truly credible measures.”
At the same time, the participation of small countries, many of them poorer nations, is not being overlooked: the IMF agreement
calls
for a tripling of so-called “basic votes,” which ensures that these countries’ voices will be better heard.
The world has good reason to be far less tolerant of what North Korea or Iran do in the realm of nuclear weapons and to reject their
calls
for equal treatment with India.
Remedying them
calls
for a minimum of federalism and commensurate democratic legitimacy – and thus for greater openness to institutional adaptation.
While Qureshi
calls
for economic growth to be “inclusive,” most of the policies he recommends fit more with the failed Washington Consensus than with the new directions proposed by resurgent progressive economists.
Addressing the PLCs
calls
for a new approach to health, and to the organizations charged with protecting it.
The CCP might try to eliminate all mention of what happened at Tiananmen Square for fear of triggering renewed
calls
for human rights and democracy; but, though this anniversary will pass without official acknowledgment, the protesters’ demands have not gone away, and they cannot be suppressed forever.
Rows over product safety and intellectual piracy could all too easily fuel
calls
for tough new trade limits.
Graeber sums up this argument in what he
calls
an “iron law of liberalism”: “any market reform, any government initiative intended to reduce red tape and promote market forces, will have the ultimate effect of increasing the total number of regulations, the total amount of paperwork, and the total number of bureaucrats the government employs.”
It may well be the toughest challenge Xi faces in realizing what he
calls
the “China Dream.”
As
calls
to rein in social media grow, it is the world’s newspapers – until very recently thought to be on the ropes – that have provided the reporting needed to convince policymakers to act.
This
calls
for something of a gentlemen’s agreement, with the EU pledging to take UK interests into account when making trade-policy decisions.
Robbing the RomaBUDAPEST – A year and a half has passed since the European Commission adopted the EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, which
calls
upon European Union governments to create comprehensive plans aimed at strengthening social inclusion and improving the well-being of their Romani citizens.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Phone
There
People
About
Would
World
Other
Countries
Government
Economic
Political
Policy
Could
While
International
After
Action
Himself