Embrace
in sentence
1216 examples of Embrace in a sentence
Craxi, of course, later found refuge in the
embrace
of another recently fallen Arab dictator, Tunisia’s Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, when he fled Italy to escape imprisonment in 1992.
Given the obvious need, and the availability of technologies to meet it cost-effectively, one would think that publishers and officials charged with the protection of intellectual property would quickly
embrace
an agreement that would give sight-impaired people broader access.
As I argued in my recent book The Only Game in Town, “No company and certainly no country will be able to harvest its realizable potential if it fails to
embrace
and empower human talent regardless of gender, race, culture, sexual orientation, and perspectives.”
Mainstream parties must
embrace
the kind of open and constructive debate that nurtured parliamentary democracy in the Federal Republic’s early years, rather than remaining focused on political tactics.
But, instead of letting that debate rage while the planet heats up, policymakers should
embrace
one of the cheapest ways of cutting the air pollution that lies at the root of the problem: making buildings more efficient.
The TAP would also
embrace
almost half of Latin America’s population and include around 50% of its combined GDP, giving the region the central role that it lacks in the TPP or the TTIP.
As Tibet, Hong Kong, and Macao returned "to the
embrace
of the Motherland," Mao's commitment seemed close to realization.
First, why are Europeans more reluctant than Americans to
embrace
biotechnology?
Indeed, Gaddafi’s emphatic call for Libya to
embrace
the market economy could have a sort of revolutionary domino effect among North Africa’s “dirigiste” economies, improving the chances for a revitalization of plans to open and integrate the Maghreb Union economies.
Thus, foreign aid was regarded as a plot to trap poor nations in a neo-colonial
embrace.
Education needs to focus on improving how students think, work, and
embrace
technology, and on providing the social and emotional skills needed to collaborate with others.
For its part, the international community must
embrace
Hamas’s involvement in the pursuit of a peaceful settlement of the Palestine-Israel conflict.
Even if all of the world’s nuclear-weapon states
embrace
the vision of a world free of the threat of nuclear conflict, nuclear weapons will remain with us for two decades at least, and even that would require the most favorable conditions for disarmament.
And Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff may
embrace
more stable macroeconomic policies and accelerate structural reforms, including privatization.
Of course, America’s experience with divided government can leave one pessimistic about the two parties’ ability to compromise; but, as Mexico recently demonstrated when its three big parties agreed on a market-oriented “Pact for Mexico,” even bitterly opposed political parties can overcome their suspicions to
embrace
needed reforms.
Given that recent research shows that much of the burden of corporate taxation is borne by workers in the form of lower wages, Democrats should
embrace
tax reform as a way to support income growth.
There are plenty of serious intellectuals in Islamic societies who want to revive the reformist call for the
embrace
of some of the ideas of Western Enlightenment: the value of science, the importance of liberal tolerance, and the need for free and open discussion.
The 1990s was the era of neoliberalism, an economic worldview that wrongly assumed that the benefits of economic growth would trickle down to those at the bottom; government should
embrace
austerity and do little more than let markets work.
For starters, national health-care spending across the OECD must shift from its almost exclusive focus on medical care and
embrace
new entrants that can deliver health improvements.
If investors recognize the benefits of getting in on the ground floor of the new economy, they will be more likely to
embrace
the necessary changes, thereby helping to drive forward a critical climate transition.
It is no accident that these three countries have been quickest to
embrace
Trump’s “fake news” trope.
As industrial policy returns to the scene in countries around the world, that is a goal that advocates and opponents alike should be happy to
embrace.
If the parties to CITES
embrace
the technological capabilities that are available to them, local communities and our planet’s wildlife will be the biggest winners.
And as conventional politicians continue to take rearguard action against populist upstarts, they will likely
embrace
more fiscal-policy easing – or at least avoid tightening – to reap near-certain short-term economic gains.
Finally, policymakers should
embrace
the Internet of Things.
So, rather than repudiate them as dangerous cults, successive governments rushed to
embrace
them.
And, despite the mention of a new, enlarged agreement with Iran, Trump continues to
embrace
the radical visions of his new secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, and national security adviser, John Bolton.
Lately, the economists who are most influential with left-leaning politicians seem hopeful that growth, employment, and incomes will rise if policymakers
embrace
massive new deficit-financed spending to create demand for goods and services.
The Chinese leadership’s motivation in making such changes is not to
embrace
the ideals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or to placate foreign demands.
Yet most European citizens could
embrace
it as a sensible solution.
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