Fundamental
in sentence
2832 examples of Fundamental in a sentence
This approach carries two
fundamental
risks.
The international investigation that led to the Panama Papers and the Paradise Papers are brilliant examples of journalism that is relevant and interesting – two
fundamental
criteria that all reporting should meet.
Second, democracy requires institutions of restraint, such as an independent judiciary and media, to uphold
fundamental
rights like freedom of speech and prevent governments from abusing their power.
Mr. Tung, whose moral precepts are informed by a doctrinaire interpretation of Confucian classics emphasizing obedience to one's superiors, seems oblivious to what China views as the
fundamental
challenge that it now faces.
After all, the flipside of that perspective, which rests on a
fundamental
belief in the equalizing effect of the market, is what Michael Sandel calls our “meritocratic hubris”: the misguided idea that success (and failure) is up to us alone.
Given their diverse economic and political circumstances, Asia’s leaders have been unable to agree on a strategy that addresses migration’s
fundamental
cause: people’s natural inclination to pursue the best available opportunities by any means possible.
To benefit from Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) an economy requires, in addition to sophisticated telecommunications infrastructure,
fundamental
advances in basic literacy and secondary technical education.
But the
fundamental
issues of principle always remained unresolved, because -- until now -- neither side was prepared to push the fight to the limit.
It is even possible that there could be a
fundamental
parting of the ways between Britain and the rest of Europe.
No provisions in the Treaty address this
fundamental
problem.
Apart from the accounting trick implicit in Scandinavia’s success, the high share of government in employment may also make a real contribution to solving one of the most
fundamental
problems western economies now face.
This owes much to the humiliations that Russia suffered when the end of communism forced its economy to its knees, and to Western short-sightedness about Russia’s
fundamental
strengths and resilience.
In short, it will entail
fundamental
changes in the Chinese growth model.
The Silver Lining in High Commodity PricesCambridge – Today’s soaring commodity prices scream a
fundamental
truth of modern life that many politicians, particularly in the West, don’t want us to hear: the world’s natural resources are finite, and, as billions of people in Asia and elsewhere escape poverty, Western consumers will have to share them.
In mid-April, the Constitution Review committee of Japan’s House of Representatives issued a final report on the
fundamental
problems facing Japan’s Constitution and submitted it to the Chair of House of the Diet.
Yet the pressure for
fundamental
change – particularly of Article 9, which putatively pledges that Japan will never maintain armed forces – is such that there is a real chance that these obstacles can and will be overcome.
Fundamental
change, indeed, is needed as soon as possible, because current interpretations of the constitution have consistently distorted Japan’s security and defense policies.
Yet, without
fundamental
constitutional reform, Japan’s position in Asia and the world will remain anomalous.
But this crisis revealed these reports
' fundamental
inadequacies, such that users' experiences with drugs can never credibly be ignored again.
As if that were not enough uncertainty, there is also the question of how accurate China’s
fundamental
fixed-asset investment figures are.
But what is really at stake may be even more
fundamental.
The battle lines are drawn between those governments that regard the free flow of information, and the ability to access it, as a matter of
fundamental
human rights, and those that regard official control of information as a
fundamental
sovereign prerogative.
But an even deeper difference concerns the
fundamental
issue of who owns information in the first place.
But the
fundamental
problem remains the lopsided distribution of power in the international system.
There should be no doubt that the rest of the world is well aware of the gross violation of the Tibetan people’s
fundamental
rights and dignity.
The Belgian economist Robert Triffin first identified this problem – dubbed the “Triffin dilemma” – in the 1960s, emphasizing the
fundamental
conflict between national objectives, such as limiting the size of the external deficit, and international imperatives, such as creating enough liquidity to satisfy demand for reserve assets.
Rather than diversify from a position of strength, managers became stuck in “active inertia” – trying to do more, but still locked into their established approach, even as it came up against
fundamental
challenges.
By clarifying that simply criticizing the government’s actions does not constitute sedition, such an amendment would reinforce freedom of speech –
fundamental
to any democracy – while safeguarding against speech that actually incites violence.
By criminalizing sexual acts in private between consenting adults, Section 377 violates the
fundamental
rights guaranteed under Article 21 (life and liberty, including privacy and dignity), Article 14 (equality before the law) and Article 15 (prohibition of discrimination) of India’s constitution.
Only then can it be a “faithful mirror of a civilization underlining the
fundamental
values on which it rests.”
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