Displaced
in sentence
592 examples of Displaced in a sentence
Like one of the world’s greatest nations – though one currently debased by those who purport to lead it – the Kurdish nation-state will be a “shining city on a hill,” a luminous lodestar for the lost sons and daughters of Kurdistan, and a source of hope for all of the world’s dispossessed and
displaced.
Add to that the millions more who were injured and
displaced
from their homes, as well as the destruction of one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.
Displaced
farmers and workers must be provided with the education and training required to enter new jobs, as well as the funds, health care, and other essential services that they need to tide them through the transition.
More than a hundred thousand people remain
displaced
by the accident, some having lost family, homes, possessions, and even the desire to live.
Displaced
by new competition, workers have gone on strike in countries like Korea, where the old "iron bowl" of employment protection has shattered.
Allowing
displaced
people to participate in formal labor markets would enable them to earn an income, pay taxes, and eventually become less dependent on handouts as they develop skills that eventually can be used to rebuild their war-ravaged countries.
Displaced
women, who are often the most isolated in resettlement situations, would be among the main beneficiaries.
The US adventure in Iraq has squandered $150 billion over two years, while Bolivia received $10 million--that's right, $10 million--in "emergency" help, a fifteenth or less of what was realistically needed to ease the intense economic crisis and help
displaced
peasants.
The Assad regime’s indiscriminate attacks have forcibly displaced, injured, or killed millions of noncombatants.
The UN High Commission on Refugees reports that natural disasters have
displaced
more than 26 million people per year since 2008 – almost a third of the total number of forcibly
displaced
people in this time period.
People Power in the CaucasusFor the past month, women in Georgia who were
displaced
from Abkhazia during the 1993 conflict have witnessed history moving backwards; everything they lived through 15 years ago is repeating itself.
These women are now hosting a new flood of
displaced
civilians from Abkhazia and South Ossetia after Russia’s aggression in those regions, as well as within the Georgian territories that Russian forces have occupied since the invasion.
In Tbilisi alone, there are more than 500 camps for internally
displaced
people, many of them women and children living with shortages of food and medical supplies.
Now is the time for Georgian, Russian, Abkazian, and Ossetian civilians who are bearing the brunt of the conflict to come together to stop imperial chess games that kill thousands of people and leave thousands more
displaced
and emotionally wounded.
After the war, dozens of countries created the Bank not simply to rebuild Europe, but also to address the needs of those who had been
displaced.
Many of today’s refugees have already been
displaced
for decades, with new generations – both kids and grandkids – born and raised in sprawling refugee camps like Kenya’s Dadaab.
Under the 1951 Refugee Convention, the international community has a legal duty to uphold the rights of
displaced
people.
Indeed, as part of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals for 2030, world leaders identified refugees, the internally displaced, and migrants as vulnerable populations that deserve protection.
But the year’s lasting legacy will be an even more extensive disaster, with recovery taking years, if not decades: nearly two million newly
displaced
children, trapped in conflict zones across Iraq, Syria, Gaza, the Central African Republic, and elsewhere.
These children have joined the ranks of 25 million
displaced
boys and girls worldwide – a number equivalent to the population of a midsize European country and the largest in the 70 years since the end of World War II.
Images of vulnerable, desolate refugee children – likely to be
displaced
for a decade or more – have become so common that the world seems unable to comprehend what it is seeing.
They now accept political contributions from big business, and have accordingly adopting the language of common prosperity and “consensus politics,” leaving the many working people who do not share in that prosperity and consensus feeling disregarded and
displaced.
Taking care of those
displaced
by the conflict is the least we can do.
The feeling is
displaced
– indeed, misplaced.
Others no doubt
displaced
their emotions, which could have stemmed from any number of private and public sorrows.
In all markets, when innovators can enter easily and are not blocked by unjustified regulations, everyone stands to benefit – eventually even those whose occupations are disrupted or
displaced.
Coming after six years of civil war, in which some 400,000 civilians have been killed and millions displaced, Trump’s unexpected intervention was praised by most US politicians, though it was carried out without the requisite congressional approval.
The government can, say, impose zoning regulations, help small retailers find specialized niches in the market, or provide skills training to
displaced
workers.
According to some studies, at least 137,000 civilians have died violently in Afghanistan and Iraq in the last ten years; among Iraqis alone, there are 1.8 million refugees and 1.7 million internally
displaced
people.
According to the Chilcot report, at least 150,000 Iraqis (and possibly four times that number) have been killed in the years since the invasion, and an estimated three million people have been
displaced
from their homes.
Back
Next
Related words
People
Million
Their
Refugees
Internally
Workers
Which
Countries
Children
Country
Conflict
Number
Millions
Years
Homes
Thousands
Since
Other
Forcibly
World