Founding
in sentence
388 examples of Founding in a sentence
They should also strengthen the rights of minority shareholders and outside directors to prevent expropriation by
founding
families.
This was the motivation behind the
founding
of the German Reichsbank (1875), which was a response to the stock-market and financial collapse of 1873, and the US Federal Reserve System (1914), which was established in the wake of the major financial crisis of 1907.
We the People of EuropeFLORENCE – Europeans who are eager to revive the continent’s unification process have recently turned their attention to the
founding
of the United States.
But there are striking parallels between America’s
founding
years and the European Union’s ongoing political and economic crisis.
There, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s government has proposed a law enshrining the collective primacy of the country’s Jews – legislation that destroys in spirit and form what little is left of Israel’s
founding
commitment to equality under the law.
Kim’s intentions may become clearer next month, when the North is expected to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the
founding
of the ruling Korean Workers’ Party by conducting a nuclear test and launching a new intercontinental missile.
China's Reforms Stall AgainAs the 82 nd anniversary of the
founding
of the Chinese Communist Party approached last July, the Party's new General Secretary, Hu Jintao, seemed on the verge of announcing a whole new range of reforms.
True to their movement’s
founding
prophet, Stalin, Mao, Castro, and Che held no respect for life.
For currencies, as for countries,
founding
myths matter.
Israel’s response to Hamas’s victory will obviously be complicated by its own elections on March 28, and by a government headed by an interim prime minister, Ehud Olmert, owing to Sharon’s incapacitation just weeks after leaving Likud and
founding
a new, centrist party, Kadima (Forward).
Henry Kissinger is one;Singapore’s
founding
father, Lee Kuan Yew, is another.
As were all previous administrations since the
founding
of Israel, US government leaders must be in the forefront of achieving this long-delayed goal.
China, which has just been celebrating with a martial pomp the sixtieth anniversary of Mao’s
founding
of the “People’s Republic” constitutes one of the most interesting cases of a nation evincing “short sightedness” towards its past.
That process gradually built the liberal international order, first with an aborted attempt after World War I – embodied in the ill-fated League of Nations – and then after World War II, with the
founding
of the United Nations and the Bretton Woods institutions.
Along with frequent references to America’s
founding
principles and to the touchstones of US history, Obama presented a vision of society, government, and foreign relations with which most Europeans could identify, including explicit references to women’s rights and, for the first time in such a high-level speech, gay rights.
Parties in the center campaigned for “social justice,” for ultra-religious students to “share the burden” of military service (from which they have been exempt since Israel’s founding), and in defense of the country’s struggling middle class.
(The republic’s
founding
document, the Union of Utrecht of 1579, proclaimed that “every individual should remain free in his religion, and no one should be molested or questioned on the subject of divine worship.”)
It is amazing because France is not just a
founding
member of the European Community, but also has been the main driving force behind all major steps toward “ever closer union.”
Populists are making gains across the European Union, and Italy, a
founding
member, is now governed by a Euroskeptic coalition comprising the populist Five Star Movement (M5S) and nationalist League party.
With the Netherlands, France, Germany, and Italy all facing populist insurgencies – and at least the first three holding elections this year – the Brexit and Trump shocks have naturally provoked anxiety that the next domino to fall will be one of these EU
founding
members, followed perhaps by the entire EU.
High Tensions In the Low CountriesBelgium and the Netherlands, two
founding
members of the European Union, are increasingly divided about what that project now means.
Europe cannot afford a dogfight between these two
founding
member states, so it’s high time to put emotions aside and review their differences on the future course of European integration.
But even stronger than this economic common-sense-argument is the political imperative: if we maintain a divided Europe, we will never reach the Europe of liberty and peace that was the original vision of the
founding
fathers that wrote The Treaty of Rome.
But let’s back up historically, to the
founding
of what we might call modern conservatism in early nineteenth-century Britain and France.
But with the onset of the Cold War and the emergence of the non-aligned movement, the intentions of the UN's
founding
fathers were progressively thwarted.
The no-bailout clause that was included in the monetary union’s
founding
treaty is an indispensable corollary.
If Sarkozy’s presidency has any relevance to Franco-German relations, it may be to reinforce the view that the EU needs new leadership, and that it must still be based on the
founding
partners.
This year Israel is celebrating both the 100th anniversary of the
founding
of Zionism and its 50th anniversary as an independent nation.
I was ICANN’s
founding
chairman, and we more or less followed the rules of trademarks, with an overlay of “first come, first served.”
Actually, this would imply a return to the IMF’s
founding
principle: it is in the best interest of all members to allow countries to pursue their own full-employment macroeconomic policies, even if this requires regulating capital flows.
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