Exposure
in sentence
648 examples of Exposure in a sentence
But
exposure
to foreign television stations also means that many disillusioned Algerians are looking towards escape to Italy, France, or Germany as their only hope of employment and a decent life.
In this sense, climate-change forecasts should challenge politicians and business leaders to re-calibrate their perceptions of
exposure
and disaster risk.
Continued development in vulnerable regions – particularly coastlines – contributes heavily to the increasing
exposure
of economic assets.
Companies using toxic materials want to anticipate which workers may be genetically sensitive to toxic
exposure.
Moreover, China’s younger generation are keenly aware of their quality of life, owing partly to their constant
exposure
to advanced-country lifestyles.
Autocratic governments create laws and regulations to protect themselves and their cronies from criticism or
exposure
by independent media.
Turkey’s Coup that FailedANKARA – The
exposure
of the plan hatched by senior military officials – called “Operation Sledgehammer” – to destabilize Turkey’s government, and the subsequent arrest of high-ranking officers, demonstrates the growing strength of Turkey’s democracy.
Moreover, prosecutors’ efforts to uncover the truth are not a campaign to discredit the Turkish army, as some allege; nor has the
exposure
of “Sledgehammer” led to an emerging showdown between “secularists” and “Islamists.”
Valuing the United NationsMELBOURNE – There is nothing like
exposure
to smart and idealistic young people to make jaded and world-weary policymakers and commentators feel better about the future.
Over time, however,
exposure
to female leaders at the local level can reduce bias and boost the aspirations and educational achievement of young women, as is happening in India.
So far, not nearly enough has been done to assess Asia’s
exposure
to climate impacts, much less to strengthen protections for vulnerable areas or reduce greenhouse-gas emissions.
Generally, much of our uneasiness reflects our
exposure
to threats that we can only partly control.
Interdependency is, in fact, mutual dependency – a shared
exposure
to hazards.
We cannot continue to pursue strategies that ignore our common
exposure
to global risks, and the resulting environment of mutual dependence.
But the rapid expansion of credit brought about by foreign financial intermediaries using various channels (including direct lending, lending via banking subsidiaries, and lending via leasing subsidiaries) has fueled asset booms and heightened
exposure
to foreign-exchange risk.
This increasing
exposure
to people – and hence to ideas, activities, and even diseases – could explain the impact of city size on socioeconomic outcomes.
Given the
exposure
of some euro-zone states such as Austria, this crisis will also affect the euro area directly.
Critics like the German economist Hans-Werner Sinn have made a specialty of tracking
exposure
to the break-up risk.
Mohamed Ali, the Ottoman adventurer who took control in 1805 after France’s withdrawal, began to modernize Egypt by introducing effective administration, industrialization,
exposure
to Europe, and a standing army.
Understandably, the
exposure
of the IPL as a morass of deceit, discredited by “spot-fixing” episodes engineered by unscrupulous bookies and venal players, has deflated such heady notions.
But even here Japan’s situation is not as dire as many seem to think, owing to its limited
exposure
to China; for example, exports to China amount to only 3% of Japan’s GDP.
Letters to the editors of newspapers used to be carefully screened, to prevent haters and cranks from getting public
exposure.
But times have changed, along with incomes, education levels, and
exposure
to outside ideas.
It is theoretically possible that a single country could be held liable for the ESM’s total
exposure
of €700 billion.
Finally, the ESM cannot be considered on its own, but must be seen in the context of the total
exposure
amount, which includes the €1.4 trillion in bailout funds that have already been granted.
But, since the onset of the global financial crisis, eurozone-based banks’ subsidiaries in emerging Europe have been reducing their
exposure
to the region.
To be sure, they will help to prevent banks from using instruments resembling collateralized debt obligations (which banks use to repackage individual loans for placement on secondary markets) to reduce their
exposure.
The crisis affects non-Europeans too; for example, concern over the
exposure
of American banks and money-market funds to troubled European banks is harming US financial markets.
While we know the corollaries of high levels of radiation exposure, what happens at the other end of the scale is less clear.
The active power that information provides is typically the threat of
exposure.
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