Governments
in sentence
11197 examples of Governments in a sentence
Unlike development aid money, that must go through official agencies, through governments, remittances directly reach the poor, reach the family, and often with business advice.
Most of the
governments
in the world have allowed their post offices to have exclusive partnerships with money transfer companies.
Governments
should recognize that small remittances are not money laundering.
Second,
governments
should abolish exclusive partnerships between their post office and the money transfer company.
Moderator: So his revelations, your analysis, the work of other journalists, have really developed the debate, and many governments, for example, have reacted, including in Brazil, with projects and programs to reshape a little bit the design of the Internet, etc.
As somebody who finds mass surveillance odious for all the reasons I just talked about and a lot more, I mean, I look at this as work that will never end until
governments
around the world are no longer able to subject entire populations to monitoring and surveillance unless they convince some court or some entity that the person they've targeted has actually done something wrong.
Unfortunately for us, when it comes to fostering democratic processes, our city
governments
have not used technology to its full potential.
So far, most city
governments
have been effective at using tech to turn citizens into human sensors who serve authorities with data on the city: potholes, fallen trees or broken lamps.
That's not participation, and in fact,
governments
have not been very good at using technology to enable participation on what matters — the way we allocate our budget, the way we occupy our land, and the way we manage our natural resources.
The good news is, and I do have good news to share with you, we don't need to wait for
governments
to do this.
Bia, Jovita and Leandro are living examples of something that citizens and city
governments
around the world need to know: We are ready.
Governments
in developing countries have been doing this for decades, and it's only now, with more evidence and new technology that it's possible to make this a model for delivering aid.
It's important that we protect our journalists and freedom of the press, because that makes
governments
more accountable to us and more transparent.
We can create a culture of transparency and accountability to the laws, and make
governments
more accountable to us, as we are to them.
Governments
and civil societies are experimenting with new approaches.
We don't measure whether
governments
pass laws against discrimination, we measure whether people experience discrimination.
So on top of an overall labor shortage, we will face a big skill mismatch in the future, and this means huge challenges in terms of education, qualification, upskilling for
governments
and companies.
And this kind of de-averaging reveals the crucial challenge for
governments
and businesses.
So what can we, what can governments, what can companies do?
And together with other teammates in the National Forest Department, we were assigned a task to join a team and find out the causes of deforestation, and make a plan to combat that at a national level, involving the local governments, the civil society, business, local communities, in an effort that could tackle those causes.
And fifth and last, we need to share responsibility between governments, business and civil society.
To be sure,
governments
have different resources to bring to the table.
And we know that answer because of the extraordinary work of an incredible group of NGOs, of governments, of local leaders, of U.N. agencies and many humanitarian and other organizations that came and joined the fight to try and stop Ebola in West Africa.
What we saw, ladies and gentlemen, which was probably most impressive, was this incredible work by the governments, by the leaders in these countries, with the communities, to try to ensure people understood this disease, understood the extraordinary things they would have to do to try and stop Ebola.
That same technology was deployed later in North Africa for similar purposes to help activists stay connected when
governments
were deliberately shutting off connectivity as a means of population control.
Well, the team and I at the foundation thought you might want to work with the top universities in the world, with leading businesses within the world, with the biggest convening platforms in the world, and with
governments.
And it's very difficult to get the majority of men who control the university system, the majority of men that control the military system, the majority of men that control the
governments
of the world, and the majority of men that control the great religions.
So, for the last 5 years, I've been taking pads of this paper, tons of this stuff, and smuggling it into the stationery supplies of the United States and the Coalition
governments.
This matters for governments, because to counter these groups, they will have to invest more in non-military tools.
We are calling upon governments, businesses, universities, to change their policies.
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