Cooperation
in sentence
3172 examples of Cooperation in a sentence
Making Russia a key player in the solution, instead of part of the problem, could benefit all sides, and establish a precedent for
cooperation
on other global issues.
In trying to depict its current dealings with Africa as “win-win” cooperation, China deliberately seeks to portray Africa’s current relations with the West as exploitative.
China’s credo of “non-interference in domestic affairs” and “separation of business and politics” is, not surprisingly, music to the ears of African leaders, who fall over each other to sing the praises of Chinese
cooperation
with their countries.
According to this approach, energy
cooperation
should form the core of collaboration, while infrastructure construction and trade and investment form two wings.
Nuclear power, satellites, and new energy sources are three high-tech areas where
cooperation
can lead to important breakthroughs.
Globalization has made all countries more interdependent, in turn requiring greater global
cooperation.
And yet the country’s reemergence as a major player on the world stage must be tempered with the recognition that its power depends on
cooperation
with its partners and the development of a strong, unified European foreign and security policy.
As a medium-size power however, Germany cannot be present everywhere; maintaining a broader international footprint will require
cooperation
with allies and partners around the world.
After World War II, however, Europe rose to the challenge, setting the stage for unprecedented regional
cooperation.
Now the Europeans are setting up a European Monetary Fund – a nickname that Europeans may oppose – in
cooperation
with the IMF.
In 1963, India was one of the first countries to establish diplomatic relations with the European Economic Community (the predecessor to today’s EU), and the India-EU Strategic Partnership and Joint Action Plan of 2005 and 2008 offer a framework for security
cooperation.
The EU member states must develop a collective approach to national-security problems before meaningful strategic
cooperation
between the EU and India can occur.
There is also room for technological
cooperation.
Yet the case for India-EU
cooperation
could not be stronger, since the bulk of the world’s problem areas lie between India and Europe (or, as Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt once put it, between the Indus and the Nile).
We need long-term public-investment strategies, environmental planning, technology roadmaps, public-private partnerships for new, sustainable technologies, and greater global
cooperation.
While an international legal code that defines cyber attacks more clearly, together with
cooperation
on preventive measures, can help, such arms-control solutions are not likely to be sufficient.
A well-run military can be a source of attraction, and military
cooperation
and training programs can establish transnational networks that enhance a country’s soft power.
This is not to discount the need for such projects; the renewable-energy sector, in particular, holds enormous opportunities for
cooperation.
Obviously,
cooperation
agreements and private investment in this sector should be encouraged.
So defense investment is also investment in security and stability, in diplomacy and cooperation, and in technology and innovation.
Their idea – now called “global governance” – was to create an institutional architecture that could foster international cooperation, elaborate consensual global norms, and establish predictable, universally applicable rules, to the benefit of all.
Europe needs more cooperation, integration, risk sharing, and solidarity.
We propose an education investment bank to be established with the
cooperation
of the GPE and major international investment banks, capitalized in part by proceeds from a financial-transaction tax (FTT), such as that proposed for the European Union.
Its activities should include raising capital (equity and debt) for global education; providing investment-banking services to governments, businesses, and multilateral agencies in
cooperation
with local banks; and offering consulting and advisory services for public-private partnerships, privatization, decentralization, loans, and concessionary finance negotiations.
Despite efforts to secure multilateral cooperation, in today’s Hobbesian world, the slide toward climate chaos seems unstoppable.
Despite talk of strengthening regional cooperation, a framework for dealing with migration remains an elusive prospect.
While both demonstrated an understanding of the value of cooperation, their strategies have little in common.
But Australia’s new policy on “irregular maritime arrivals” undermines regional
cooperation.
Meanwhile, in the years since the Copenhagen summit, there has been a surge of concrete progress on the part of the “non-state actors” whose
cooperation
will be needed to implement an international agreement.
Given their common interests, a return to cooperation, though highly challenging, is not impossible.
Back
Next
Related words
International
Global
Countries
Economic
Security
Which
Their
Would
Between
Other
Should
Regional
World
Among
Could
Political
Trade
There
Multilateral
Climate