Embedded
in sentence
390 examples of Embedded in a sentence
Of course, the guards know that their job is to ensure that everyone is safe and comfortable, but the Gulag-type notion of what a guard does is too
embedded
to be removed.
Syria’s problem is not simply Assad’s presence in power; removing his regime would not by itself harmonize the interests
embedded
in the country’s patchwork quilt of ethnic and sectarian identities.
The more federal eurozone would be
embedded
in a larger union that cooperates on defense, foreign policy, climate-change measures, and migration policy.
The main problem is that a shift of this magnitude risks undermining hard-won central bank credibility; after all, central banks have been promising to deliver 2% inflation for a couple of decades now, and that level is deeply
embedded
in long-term financial contracts.
South Africa’s state capture is deeply
embedded.
In order to placate Hong Kong’s restive population – which included many refugees from China – a “one country, two systems” policy was
embedded
in the region’s constitution, promising Hong Kong “a high degree of autonomy,” except in foreign and defense affairs for 50 years.
With another year of uneven job creation, the problems associated with long-term and youth unemployment have become more deeply
embedded
in the economy’s structure.
The paradox is that Iran's potential is
embedded
in its ideology as an Islamic state.
They must be
embedded
in a much more complex institutional framework, which I would describe as the liberal order.
Rather than confirming the paradigm of gradual and steady improvement, these disaggregated numbers attest to a highly segmented, multi-speed labor market – one with features that could become more deeply
embedded
in the structure of the economy.
Other developments, both before and since, have reinforced and
embedded
the RtoP norm.
They understood that they were
embedded
in a web of obligations, powers, responsibilities, and privileges that was as large as France itself.
But it does not eliminate the short-term bias
embedded
in the EU’s fiscal rules.
Above all, long-term fiscal outlooks must be fully
embedded
in the EU and its member states.
In fact, the model was probably doomed from the start, owing to several fatal flaws that are
embedded
in its structure.
They are
embedded
in societies in the form of culture.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, perhaps the country's most credible human rights body, argues that while "the violence now deeply
embedded
in society is to be rooted out over the coming years," that task "presents bigger challenges than merely picking up, detaining, and torturing those who authorities claim are militants."
In the future, geologists will see telltale markers like radioactive carbon – debris from nuclear blasts – and plastic waste scattered across the planet’s surface and
embedded
in rock.
For example, Walmart has teamed up with the Environmental Defense Fund to devise a strategy to eliminate 20 million tons of
embedded
carbon in the products on its shelves.
Rules-based cooperation is
embedded
in Europe’s – and especially the EU’s – institutional DNA.
We recognize that child marriage is a deeply
embedded
tradition in many societies – all too often sanctioned by religious leaders.
Building bigger, more integrated sub-regional markets that are deeply
embedded
in the global economy is one of the most urgent tasks that we are facing.
How, for example, does one account for and mitigate the carbon emissions
embedded
in goods?
In an ideal world, where compromise is unnecessary, US fiscal policy would maintain the commitments
embedded
in the social-welfare system, even as demographic and other forces drive up costs (especially for health care).
The most successful public policies and fiscal choices are those that are not only guided by the enduring values
embedded
in the social contract, but that are also adapted to changing demographic, technological, and global circumstances.
Yet, even as these linkages have deepened and multiplied, the global economy has remained fundamentally a collection of national economies, each
embedded
in national politics.
The emergence of such a truly global capitalism – a process that, to be sure, is far from complete – means that markets will no longer be
embedded
in the politics or regulatory systems of various nation-states.
If they are to produce desirable outcomes, they will need to be
embedded
more deeply in – and regulated more effectively by – global institutions.
In other words, the emergence of a global market is not
embedded
in any legitimacy-conferring political process.
Far from deepening multilateral structures, he wants to dismantle them, dislodging the global market from the regulatory institutions in which it is already only weakly
embedded.
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