Donor
in sentence
361 examples of Donor in a sentence
The more the
donor
child is placed in physical jeopardy the thornier the issue becomes.
The debate in the US, long Egypt’s primary ally and donor, did not center on strengthening Egypt’s embattled institutions, but focused instead on how to ease the military out of power by withholding aid.
The sheer volume of new benchmarks has development organizations and
donor
governments scratching their heads, so Copenhagen Consensus has commissioned economists to examine and prioritize the targets.
Although other
donor
countries, such as Canada and France, have at times spoken out against Hun Sen’s abuses, the US government, as the actor wielding the most leverage, has historically led the charge.
These cases are particularly interesting, because the first case resulted in the clinical onset of variant CJD (with typical symptoms and pathology) 6.5 years after the transfusion from a
donor
who, although asymptomatic at the time of donation, subsequently developed and died from CJD.
The second case involved a known recipient of such cells transfused from another asymptomatic
donor
who subsequently died from variant CJD, whereas the recipient showed no evidence of neurological disease and died of unrelated causes.
In many low-income countries, making these investments will require forging partnerships with foreign governments – and we welcome the vital role that
donor
programs, aid agencies, and volunteer organizations can play by working within the framework of national plans.
The investments needed to make this happen represent a fraction of most
donor
assistance to low- and middle-income countries, but would have a massive global impact on human development in the long term.
Given budgetary pressure in many
donor
countries, official development assistance is on the decline and cannot be relied upon to fill this need.
It has now emerged as a significant
donor
to developing countries in Africa and Asia, second only to China in the range and quantity of development assistance given by countries of the global South.
In Asia, India remains by far the largest single
donor
to its neighbor Bhutan, as well as a generous aid
donor
to Nepal, the Maldives, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka as it recovers from civil war.
Given Afghanistan’s vital importance for the security of the subcontinent, India’s assistance program there already amounts to more than $1.2 billion – modest from the standpoint of Afghan needs, but large for a non-traditional
donor
– and is set to rise further.
Its focus on capacity development, its accessibility, and its long record of support for developing countries have made India an increasingly welcome
donor.
By bringing the Internet to refugees,
donor
states would be supporting programs like “digital classrooms” and online health-care clinics, services that can be difficult to deliver in refugee communities.
Under Thaksin, Thailand graduated from aid recipient and became a
donor
country for the first time, having turned away development assistance from countries like Japan.
At last year’s replenishment conference, $2.1 billion in
donor
funds were leveraged to bring about an additional $26 billion in pledges from national governments.
Against this backdrop, participants at the Oslo Summit will be discussing how to generate the momentum and political will to broaden and deepen the
donor
base, and assess the highest-impact use of these funds.
Its 27 member states account for a quarter of the world’s economic output, represent the biggest single buyer of goods from the world’s developing countries, and are by far the biggest
donor
of aid.
Help the Poor Help ThemselvesHELSINKI – One early result of today’s global recession is that many
donor
governments are trimming their foreign aid programs.
It is also easy to predict that
donor
governments will be looking carefully at the ever-growing expenditure on the United Nations’ 14 peacekeeping operations around the world.
If Trump’s proposed cuts are implemented, while Germany maintains its aid spending, the US would no longer be the biggest donor, even in absolute terms.
Foreign aid is all too often directed at satisfying the needs of the donor, not the recipient.
Until now, however, its lending has tended to follow
donor
fashions, rather than complementing them.
Making matters worse, critical
donor
funding – provided by a very limited number of actors, mostly government agencies and philanthropic groups in OECD countries – fell by nearly 10% last year.
At present, a single philanthropic donor, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, supports more than 25% of research on new tools to fight TB.
Lending by the IMF and global development banks, and the maintenance of
donor
aid at current levels, will be essential if we are to avoid new human tragedies.
Ironically, none of these problems seems to have befallen Bangladesh’s Grameen Bank, which survives largely on
donor
grants and sustainable repayments.
Because of the serious threat that the illegal drug economy poses to stability and democracy in Afghanistan, we must start thinking in terms of regulated poppy growing for medical purposes, in particular for painkillers, with the active participation of
donor
countries and the UN itself.
(Currently, of all the OECD
donor
nations, only Greece gives a lower percentage of its gross national income than the United States does.)
By the early 1990’s, official development assistance was still around 0.33% of
donor
GNP, and by the early 2000’s, it had declined to around 0.22% of GNP.
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