Displaced
in sentence
592 examples of Displaced in a sentence
Sweden would be a clear beneficiary while Portugal would be hit hard, owing to the large number of
displaced
textile workers.
Manufacturing Workers 24 Months after Layoff in the EU15Source : OECDThrough the EGF, part of the cost of helping
displaced
textile workers would be borne by all EU countries, thereby making wider trade liberalization a more likely prospect.
Displaced
workers often face unemployment, a lower-paying job, or a new job far from home.
The young fund has swiftly marshaled its initial $120 million to promote quality education for 3.2 million
displaced
children and, in turn, to support 17,000 teachers, with investments in and around Syria, as well as in Chad, Ethiopia, and Yemen.
In the 1990s, when the Balkan conflicts
displaced
almost four million people, Europe stood up and helped.
Today, such talk has been
displaced
by concern about what The Economist calls “the great slowdown.”
Large populations would be displaced, exacerbating existing economic strains and social tensions.
The Global Migration BlowbackNEW YORK – The roughly 750,000 people who have arrived in Europe by sea in 2015 make up just a small part of the 60 million people
displaced
by war or persecution – the largest number in recorded history.
Since early 2011, hundreds of thousands have died; around ten million Syrians have been displaced;Europe has been convulsed with Islamic State (ISIS) terror and the political fallout of refugees; and the United States and its NATO allies have more than once come perilously close to direct confrontation with Russia.
In refusing to take a strong position on Syria, Rouhani – like so many other world leaders – is placing his own interests above those of the 2.3 million registered Syrian refugees, the millions more who have been internally displaced, the estimated 130,000 people killed, and the rest of Syria’s long-suffering population.
Aggravating this situation is the global refugee crisis, which has
displaced
some 30 million children, six million from Syria alone, very few of whom are likely to return home during their school-age years.
Meanwhile, the already-hazy lines between asylum-seekers, refugees,
displaced
persons, and purely economic migrants are becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish at all.
The desperate plight of the world’s nearly 70 million
displaced
people and over 20 million refugees has just been recognized in new agreements hammered out in December this year.
Originally created to deliver basic assistance to refugees
displaced
during the creation of the Israeli state, the UNWRA has provided health care, employment, and emergency food and shelter for
displaced
Palestinians since 1949.
Major floods in Indonesia killed dozens and
displaced
tens of thousands.
At the time, the war in Bosnia was already more than a year old; the city of Sarajevo was under siege; tens of thousands of civilian noncombatants had already died; and hundreds of thousands had been forcibly
displaced.
Moreover, the fighting around Aleppo has
displaced
about 50,000 people, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Although China now has
displaced
Japan as the world’s second largest economy, Japan will remain a strong power for the foreseeable future.
There are now more than two million Syrian refugees in bordering countries and more than four million
displaced
persons inside Syria.
After all, both are machines, and the harvester has
displaced
far more human labor than Nexus has.
Meanwhile, many more Congolese have been
displaced
to other neighboring countries and within the DRC’s borders, fleeing the too-familiar drumbeat of conflict.
Rather than cage the golden goose of technological progress, policymakers should focus on measures that help those who are displaced, such as education and training programs, and income support and social safety nets, including wage insurance, lifetime retraining loans, and portable health and pension benefits.
This summer, the UN Refugee Agency put the number of refugees who had fled Syria at four million, in addition to 7.6 million internally
displaced
people.
Meanwhile, amid plodding deliberations of incremental steps that are clearly inadequate, Syrians are being displaced, wounded, tortured, and killed in droves.
Although figures do not convey the cruelty by all sides, it has become de rigueur to cite the numbers: more than 100,000 dead, 2.3 million refugees, and four million people internally
displaced.
But a year ago, the figures were already dire: 60,000 dead, 700,000 international refugees, and two million internally
displaced.
At the beginning of 2014, more than 51 million people were
displaced
from their homes, uprooted by conflict and persecution.
With more than ten million Syrians displaced, this trend will only continue unless something is done to ensure that they can live safely within their home country.
Sure, PowerPoint presentations have
displaced
chalkboards, enrollments in “massive open online courses” often exceed 100,000 (though the number of engaged students tends to be much smaller), and “flipped classrooms” replace homework with watching taped lectures, while class time is spent discussing homework exercises.
Most residents of the area below the line were not
displaced
or evacuated, but they were offered mortgage or rent assistance nonetheless.
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