Cooperation
in sentence
3172 examples of Cooperation in a sentence
It shows how in our globalized world the migration of people is perfectly organized and managed outside all legality with the accomplice-ship and
cooperation
of most governments or national services in the western countries concerned by these migrations.
I expected a lot from this director and the screenwriter, their previous
cooperation
on 'Cloaca' led to a masterpiece.
Mostly grouches hate cooperation, even Oscar can bend the rules of his kind.
The cinematography was pretty good and you got to see some low income parts of the Philippines during Adam's travels and understand how the poor can be taken advantage of by sooth saying organizations that hand our money for
cooperation.
Making a military movie without official
cooperation
can be difficult.
Hashimoto also proposed an increased level of security cooperation, including the exchange of visits between the Chairman of the Japanese Joint Staff Council and the Russian Joint Chief of Staff.
Apec’s original intent was to promote economic
cooperation
and trade liberalization in the region.
Adding to the mixed messages is the symbolic date of October 4, the seventh anniversary of the 2007 declaration on inter-Korean
cooperation
signed by the late South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun and the late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.
With the influence of the state declining, there is great need for international
cooperation.
But such
cooperation
is contrary to the prevailing ideas of laissez-faire on the one hand and nationalism and fundamentalism on the other.
Opinions may differ on where the dividing line between competition and
cooperation
should be drawn.
There is no international regulatory authority for financial markets, and there is not enough international
cooperation
for the taxation of capital.
Such a mechanism is already envisioned in the TTIP, in a proposed chapter on regulatory cooperation, but in an indefinite and limited way.
While an approach that rests more heavily on non-binding
cooperation
would have a weaker immediate impact, it could be the key to overcoming immediate political hurdles, without giving up on the TTIP’s longer-term potential.
Let’s then imagine what Europe needs to do to confront its most pressing challenges, especially if it were able to do so without the political constraints of 50 years of EU deal-making and ramshackle institution-building.On top of that, let us make a major leap of imagination and suppose that even though this scenario of the EU at “Year Zero” means we would not have a half-century of intra-European
cooperation
to draw on, the nations that today make up the EU would nevertheless be keen to adopt far-reaching joint policies.
Turkey is invited to Council meetings, it can participate in various EU programs and in manifestations of the European Common Foreign Policy, and, as a member of NATO, it is a partner in EU-NATO security
cooperation.
This will make it more difficult to implement the deal – brokered by German Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier this year – that gives Turkey financial support, and its citizens visa-free travel to the EU, in exchange for its
cooperation
on containing refugee flows.
To return to the path of innovative integration, the EU needs a new framework for public debate that underpins effective
cooperation
among partners and friends, instead of fueling conflict among seemingly irreconcilable rivals.
This is no small order at the level of international relations and
cooperation.
They will need quickly to face up to the reality that in order to pursue US interests in the region, including stabilizing Iraq and Afghanistan, the current standoff with Iran cannot continue, and that a greater degree of
cooperation
is unavoidable.
Needless to say, the greater the governance and policy challenges at home, the more difficult regional and global
cooperation
becomes.
After its success on the national stage in the 2010 midterm congressional election, many Republican lawmakers became so concerned about securing their party’s “base” for future re-election bids that they no longer felt comfortable pursuing the type of bipartisan
cooperation
that underpin effective economic policymaking.
The
Cooperation
CrisisPARIS – The rise of emerging economies worldwide has generated much optimism, in terms not only of economic development, but also of global
cooperation.
In fact, the opposite is true: the logic of national sovereignty has staged a comeback, with major economies consistently undermining
cooperation
on issues ranging from security to trade to climate change.
But, while the world may be happy to pretend that bilateral
cooperation
will revitalize multilateralism, nobody should be fooled.
Even
cooperation
on climate change is crumbling, with the US and China rejecting the multilateral, top-down approach to policymaking.
Japan’s isolation also increases its dependency on its only ally, the United States, and undermines the fragile chance of developing a framework in Asia to address future regional crises in a spirit of
cooperation
rather than confrontation and rivalry.
It is framing these investments within the narrative of its Belt and Road Initiative, a global vision for connectivity, cooperation, and prosperity that resonates powerfully with Latin American leaders.
Europe will reduce its energy dependence on Russia, review its strategic alignment and priorities, and scale back investment and bilateral
cooperation.
This is the only way to promote and defend the EMU’s economic interests in a world where the challenges are global and overcoming them will increasingly depend on multilateral
cooperation.
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