Conflicts
in sentence
1385 examples of Conflicts in a sentence
In many conflicts, including Sri Lanka’s, it is important to recognize the responsibility of those who fostered the ethnic discrimination that led to prolonged communal violence.
Today's
conflicts
demonstrate more clearly than ever that a military solution is neither the sole nor the best option, particularly during the stabilization of a crisis — a truth President Barack Obama has also emphasised.
I remember when this phrase was last used: in 1991, when the chairman of the European Council of Ministers visited what was still Yugoslavia and eagerly accepted the empty promises of Slobodan Milosevic and his clique that they were ready to accept European pleas for a peaceful resolution to the
conflicts
there.
A pool of designated funds that leaders could access quickly would have helped the millions of children trapped in
conflicts
in Iraq, Libya, and Syria, or the million left without schools by the recent earthquake in Nepal.
But, at the same time, Trump does not want to cede America’s global preeminence, which means that he could show a penchant for trade wars, or even military
conflicts.
Sellers need to be open and honest about potential
conflicts
of interest, risk profiles, and their business practices.
Add to that inadequate disaster-risk reduction and management by governments – many of which are dealing with other
conflicts
and crises – and the situation has become truly dire.
This put a firm limit on the extent of their conflict; all local
conflicts
were, in turn, contained by the larger conflict.
The threat comes from the inside, as local tyrants seek to establish internal dominance through external
conflicts
and as sovereign democratic states pursue their self-interest to the detriment of the common interest.
LAHORE/NEW DELHI – A subtle shift may be occurring in one of the world’s longest-standing and most intractable
conflicts
– the dispute between India and Pakistan over Kashmir.
But even the best-designed structures can achieve little without the political will to resolve
conflicts
through dialogue.
Privatization, market liberalization, the opening of closed professions, and government downsizing involve
conflicts
with powerful vested interests, such as businesses in protected industries, public-sector unions, or influential lobbies.
Resolving such
conflicts
requires social alliances, which are invariably undermined by discontent, civil disorder, and political instability.
It does not help that the vast majority (some 71%) of the 125 million people affected by
conflicts
and natural disasters reside in OIC countries.
These
conflicts
have undermined regional security, impeded investment planning, and sparked an undeclared military contest between China and its regional counterweight, the United States.
The first order of business, however, must be to resolve inter-state conflicts, such as the Algerian-Moroccan dispute over the Western Sahara, which prevent the creation of a unified Maghreb.
Establishing constructive and effective guidelines could help to prevent the sort of
conflicts
and confusion over lending conditions during crises that we have seen among the IMF, EU, and the European Central Bank in the eurozone.
What began as a democratic uprising against Bashar al-Assad’s dictatorship has developed into a cat’s cradle of conflicts, partly reflecting a brutal proxy struggle among Iran, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia for regional domination.
This is not to say that such
conflicts
do not exist and will never appear; rather, they are likely to become manageable as universities and faculty members learn how to pursue basic research in tandem with the capitalization of knowledge.
But the real similarities between the two
conflicts
are to be found in the behavior of the international community’s main actors, which have again taken opposite sides.
Moreover, the international economic crisis and tight energy-supplies have taken a toll on confidence, as have tensions over the nationalization of pension funds and
conflicts
with soy producers, who oppose an increase in their already high taxes.
At the UNFCCC conference next week, some governments will hold up the FCTC as a strong precedent to argue that the fossil-fuel industry must be excluded from ongoing climate negotiations, owing to its
conflicts
of interest with sound climate policy.
The government aspired to play a constructive role across Africa, act as a spokesman for Third-World interests at the UN and elsewhere, and promote an end to the plethora of
conflicts
bedeviling the continent.
Perhaps principles and practices widely used in academia – such as peer review, competitive processes for funding research, transparency about
conflicts
of interests and financing sources, and requirements to publish underlying data – should be adapted and applied more widely to the world of think tanks, websites, and the media.
Globalization may not have created these layers of conflicts, but it has accelerated them by making the differences more visible and palpable.
But the Turkish government has increasingly allowed itself to be dragged into Middle East conflicts, rather than functioning as an honest broker.
Trump, never shy about
conflicts
of interest, has an uncanny ability to embrace economic policies, such as the proposed tax cuts, that benefit him personally.
Most of today’s
conflicts
– in Colombia, Somalia, the DRC, Sudan, and now even Iraq and Afghanistan – are internal.
This is understandable in light of the continent’s persistent poverty, seemingly endless conflicts, and the prevalence of HIV-AIDS and other infectious diseases.
In a democracy, reconciling
conflicts
of interest among stakeholders may require that we sacrifice some efficiency.
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