Expertise
in sentence
639 examples of Expertise in a sentence
It also requires that they equip their teams with more investment
expertise
and coordinate closely with other domestic investors so that their acquisitions can have a multiplier effect on their respective national economies.
The EBRD made an important contribution to the economic transition process in Eastern Europe; there’s a good case for drawing on its experience and
expertise
to help the southern Mediterranean.
Even if ISIS does not currently have the capability to carry out cyber-attacks, it is unlikely to find it difficult to recruit followers with the requisite expertise; in the past, other terrorist and insurgent organizations, including Al Qaeda, have done just that.
With these in place, African countries can marshal additional resources for infrastructure, innovation, expertise, and new technologies.
More intriguing, constituents will be able to delegate their votes to others, perhaps friends with more
expertise
on particular issues.
But it is unclear whether AMRO has sufficient capacity and
expertise
to monitor 13 countries effectively.
Third, IRENA will be based in a developing country, a vote of confidence in the quality, institutional expertise, and dynamism that exists in the developing world.
Mastering the subject requires
expertise
in many scientific fields, including climatology, oceanography, atmospheric chemistry, ecology, engineering, politics, and economics.
Without a massive scaling up of private-sector involvement, both in terms of shared
expertise
and funding support, we will fail to provide for millions of people who have lost almost everything.
When countries go down the path of non-inclusive growth patterns, it usually results in disrespect for expertise, disillusionment with the political system and shared cultural values, and even greater social fragmentation and polarization.
With news becoming more narrowly targeted to individual interests and preferences, and with people increasingly choosing whom to trust and follow, the traditional channels for sharing
expertise
are being disrupted.
Over the course of human history, the application of
expertise
has helped tackle disease, reduce poverty, and improve human welfare.
We need
expertise
more than ever to solve the world’s problems.
The question is not how to manage without experts, but how to ensure that
expertise
is trustworthy.
It goes without saying that academic or technical
expertise
is neither necessary nor sufficient to ensure government officials’ success.
Countries should consider establishing politically independent energy agencies with high technical
expertise.
Upholding that legacy entails employing
expertise
as needed, and creating, as Edward Stiglitz of Cornell Law School has emphasized, trust in public institutions.
This unique and innovative partnership brings together 11 co-sponsoring UN agencies, each with diverse sector-specific expertise, and mobilizes various government stakeholders.
But we need Western support and
expertise
to consolidate the free society to which everyone aspires.
The interest and
expertise
of the task force was limited to one branch of psychiatry: neuropsychiatry.
The project includes interdisciplinary Japanese teams, as well as international expertise, which is important for ensuring that the project builds on models that have been used in other contaminated environments, and that it benefits from long-term databases from older incidents that can be used to test models’ predictive power.
However, the skills that are now required outside academia are changing so rapidly that universities may struggle to marry the generic cognitive skills taught in the classroom – such as critical thinking, analytical reasoning, problem solving, and writing – with the professional
expertise
that is increasingly acquired in the workplace.
The private sector, in particular, has the capacity and
expertise
to contribute substantially to international development efforts, through investments, loans, and even philanthropic resources provided by transnational corporations, financial institutions, foundations, and other sources.
For example, lecturers and professors are not tested for their expertise, nor employed to carry out specific research projects.
No matter how potent and sincere their expertise, it can do little to strengthen civil society or the public good.
This is precisely where societal demands for trustworthy scientific knowledge and non-partisan
expertise
are most pressing.
Central banks ought to be cultivating younger people, women, and minorities, in order to broaden the range of approaches, skills, perspectives, and
expertise
that effective monetary policymaking will require in the future.
Furthermore, many institutional investors do not yet have sufficient
expertise
to venture into infrastructure.
The SDSN mobilizes scientific and technical
expertise
from academia, civil society, and the private sector in support of sustainable-development problem solving at local, national, and global scales.
Forming partnerships with both national and other multilateral institutions can help them harness
expertise
from around the world.
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