Dilemma
in sentence
543 examples of Dilemma in a sentence
Syria’s civil war, with all its horrors, highlights a different
dilemma.
Herein lies a
dilemma
for the next US president: how to address the clear rift between the two lefts in a way that improves US-Latin American relations, fortifies the modern left, and weakens the retrograde left without resorting to the failed interventionist policies of the past.
Its
dilemma
is stark.
The
dilemma
for China’s leaders is that meeting the need for more in pollution control and infrastructure makes it more difficult to achieve their goal of shifting the country’s economic-growth model from one based on investment and exports to one based on consumption.
ASEAN must solve its consensus dilemma, through either procedural reforms or institutional innovations.
Another way out of the consensus
dilemma
is to create new institutional frameworks.
Europe's welfare states thus face a serious
dilemma.
One solution to this
dilemma
is simple.
Herzog would then confront the same
dilemma
that his predecessors faced in 2009 and 2013.
The delegation of discretionary power to the bottom of the system could therefore create a
dilemma
for the central leadership: exercising more control would hurt growth, but so would the rampant corruption that results from not exercising it.
The PBOC now faces a
dilemma.
This poses a
dilemma
for Chinese policymakers.
But the Ivory Coast’s
dilemma
is notable both because the country’s decline came from a relatively greater height, and for the lessons it holds concerning how states fail.
The
dilemma
concerning Iran is whether a power imbued with an “absolute” ideology can be allowed to be in control of an “absolute” weapon.
But the point in reciting this litany is not so much to highlight China’s wayward behavior as it is to demonstrate the
dilemma
in which the country finds itself: if it behaves like a “normal” power, the world will forget the many hundreds of millions of people that it still needs to pull out of poverty.
The Chinese leadership seems to be aware of this
dilemma
and is not, in fact, eager to be dragged into fierce competition with the West or its neighbors.
The
dilemma
is that all particles, whether white or black, constitute a serious problem for human health.
One way out of the
dilemma
could be to allow higher sulfur emissions in sparsely populated areas where the soil is not vulnerable to acidification.
At issue here is the oldest unresolved
dilemma
in economics: are market economies “naturally” stable or do they need to be stabilized by policy?
President Basher al-Assad of Syria faces a similar
dilemma.
A solution to the nuclear
dilemma
– or any other problem in Iran’s foreign relations – is in the hands of the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Fortunately, Straw’s example does not pose such a sharp
dilemma.
Indeed, the main
dilemma
that the international community faces is how to include everyone and still be able to act.
The result creates an impossible
dilemma
for many of the world’s most dynamic economies.
For the West – and for Europe first and foremost – this
dilemma
cannot be avoided.
But there is another aspect of Acton’s
dilemma
besides the ethics of leaders: the demands of followers.
The American founders wrestled with the
dilemma
of how powerful we want our leaders to be.
We cannot escape – and therefore must confront – the
dilemma
that gains from trade sometimes come at the expense of strains on domestic social arrangements.
Those of us who believe that invading Iraq was a mistake, and that Bush is guilty of hubris in his failure to plan adequately for the aftermath, face a dilemma: if America withdraws too precipitously, it may compound these mistakes.
The key to resolving this
dilemma
will be to press for local compromises that involve Sunnis in the political process, and to step up the rate of training of Iraqis to manage their own security.
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