Governments
in sentence
11197 examples of Governments in a sentence
Subsequent revisions of the agreement were facilitated by the British and Irish governments, who never wavered in their determination to bring peace and stability to Northern Ireland.
So
governments
who are failing, who are dropping the ball at a national level, have even less ability to get their arms around the problem at an international level.
You can take any one of the major global challenges we've discussed this week and ask yourself, where is the leadership from
governments
to step up and come up with solutions, responses, to those international problems?
I hate the idea that
governments
are not protecting human rights around the world.
I hate the idea that
governments
have dropped this ball and I can't get used to the idea that somehow we can't get them to do their jobs.
We can all make a decision to come together and pick up the balls and run with the balls that
governments
have dropped.
Governments
realize that it's a big deal for our economies, but don't know how to fix it.
But we also spent many hours in the basements of the United Nations, trying to work with
governments
to make them understand what was going on so far away from land that few of us had ever even imagined that these creatures existed.
So what we need to do is to stand up boldly, singly and together, to push governments, to push regional fisheries management organizations, to declare our right to declare certain areas off-limits to high seas fishing, so that the freedom to fish no longer means the freedom to fish anywhere and anytime.
This is the initiative that's been coordinated by Conservation International with a variety of partners and
governments
to actually try to bring integrated management regime throughout the area.
We have the support of
governments
now behind us.
Eleven African
governments
have seen that they can become less dependent by using this technology.
The second observation I'd like to make is we need to face the truth that
governments
and corporations aren't going to solve this issue for us.
BG: Well, hopefully we'll get the word out, and the
governments
will keep their generosity up.
So I proposed that
governments
create new reform zones big enough to hold cities and gave them a name: charter cities.
Or they're responding to requests and concerns by
governments
that have no jurisdiction over many, or most, of the users and viewers who are interacting with the content in question.
So we have a situation in the world today where in more and more countries the relationship between citizens and
governments
is mediated through the Internet, which is comprised primarily of privately owned and operated services.
Similarly,
governments
don't enact intelligent environmental and labor laws just because politicians wake up one day.
By the age of 24, I found myself convicted in prison in Egypt, being blacklisted from three countries in the world for attempting to overthrow their governments, being subjected to torture in Egyptian jails and sentenced to five years as a prisoner of conscience.
Even the aid agencies, who begin to receive an enormous amount of money from the U.S. and the European
governments
to build schools and clinics, are somewhat disinclined to challenge the idea that Afghanistan is an existential threat to global security.
So why do economists fall in love with authoritarian
governments?
Some of these economies were ruled by authoritarian
governments
in the 60s and 70s and 1980s.
For each of these successful authoritarian
governments
in East Asia, there's a matched failure.
If you look at the statistical evidence worldwide, there's really no support for the idea that authoritarian
governments
hold a systematic edge over democracies in terms of economic growth.
But because they're a U.N. operation, maybe that's why
governments
and corporations are not that interested in them.
And to show how big it goes, this is a drug called Tamiflu, which
governments
around the world have spent billions and billions of dollars on.
But I don't care about that,
governments
don't care.
So the good news is that earlier this year, the state council passed a new regulation on house requisition and demolition and passed the right to order forced demolition from local
governments
to the court.
So we feel really strongly that our US Senate needs to do its job, that our Senate needs to enable us as Americans not only to be able to assist disabled people and
governments
around the world to learn about the good work that we've been doing, but it's equally important that disabled people have the same opportunities to travel, study and work abroad as anyone else in our country.
We're talking about changing not just what scientists do but what grant agencies do, what universities do and what
governments
do.
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