Concerns
in sentence
2610 examples of Concerns in a sentence
And yet, an uneasy coalition government seems unlikely to address the
concerns
that drove voters to reject the entrenched ruling elite in the last election.
Growing
concerns
about China’s rise encouraged Japanese voters to support Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his bold reform program.
This raises
concerns
among public opinion that migrants rejected by some countries could flood those that do not impose tighter restrictions.
This has raised
concerns
that the population will grow old before it grows rich.
The closer a country is to China, the more China views it through the lens of domestic issues, particularly internal-security
concerns.
Concerns
about overprotection of intellectual property acting as a barrier to innovation and its diffusion are not new.
That will require demonstrating that whatever deal is reached was not a rush job, and that
concerns
about Iran’s nuclear program – such as the heavy-water reactor site at Arak, which is likely to produce plutonium – have been addressed effectively.
Russia seeks China’s support in opposing American missile-defense systems, and calls for the involvement of all nuclear states in future strategic arms-control talks, but then cites
concerns
about China’s military modernization to justify its refusal to negotiate with NATO on tactical nuclear-weapon reduction.
The US should capitalize on this situation, leveraging Russian
concerns
and interests to induce China to join strategic arms-control efforts.
The New Grammar of PowerMADRID – Humanity’s main
concerns
today are not so much concrete evils as indeterminate threats.
These
concerns
require that fiscal exit strategies be planned, announced, and implemented soon, before the stimulus programs become permanently entrenched, develop powerful dependent constituencies, and greatly increase the risk of rising interest rates, inflation, and taxation.
Instead of acknowledging the legitimacy of European concerns, he shrugged them off as a frivolity: “[I] guarantee you that in European capitals, there are people who are interested in, if not what I had for breakfast, at least what my talking points might be should I end up meeting with their leaders.”
By dismissing European
concerns
about how such surveillance is carried out, Obama has demonstrated one of America’s worst habits – that of patronizing Europe.
This new round of central-bank activism reflects persistent
concerns
about economic growth.
Making matters worse, weak demand and debt overhangs are fueling
concerns
about deflation in the eurozone and Japan.
But a nuanced Palestinian resolution that moves beyond a zero-sum mindset and embraces legitimate Israeli
concerns
is possible, and could very well increase the likelihood of a return to constructive negotiations.
Within the EU, effect-based jurisdiction might raise
concerns
about the free mobility of capital.
For Europeans, the NIE has not removed, but rather confirmed, the
concerns
that in 2003 prompted the EU-3 (Britain, France, and Germany) – namely, that Iran’s nuclear program could eventually give it a military nuclear capability, and that even before that point, it might trigger regional nuclear proliferation.
But German politicians strove to find a solution that accommodated the
concerns
of the Jewish and Muslim minorities.
The second axis of values
concerns
social justice and the environment.
This approach too often sacrifices long-term essential objectives to short-term
concerns.
The first
concerns
the so-called “right to water.”
And, frankly, I have
concerns
about some of the World Bank’s views and priorities in recent decades.
Environmental
concerns
must be fully assimilated into economic policymaking – that is, into the incentive structure that drives decisions.
Concerns
already exist that South Africa’s security services are insufficiently accountable to the public, and that they are rife with political infighting and extrajudicial surveillance.
The Brain-Drain Panic ReturnsNEW YORK – While developed countries are angst-ridden over mostly illegal immigration by unskilled workers from developing countries, a different set of
concerns
has surfaced in Africa, in particular, over the legal outflow of skilled, and even more importantly, highly skilled, people to developed countries.
Here, human-rights
concerns
pose serious difficulties.
With the need to maintain trust in the competitive, politically charged, and often unpredictable energy sector both greater than ever and more difficult than ever to meet, an international forum dedicated to addressing
concerns
and easing tensions could be a powerful tool.
But the question that we should be asking
concerns
such episodes’ impact on longer-term development.
While the logic of this argument is shaky, it taps into deep Japanese
concerns
about China’s rise.
Back
Next
Related words
About
Their
Which
Security
There
Economic
Other
Countries
Political
Would
Global
Address
Should
While
People
Could
Policy
Legitimate
World
Growth