Inclusion
in sentence
607 examples of Inclusion in a sentence
While the US tries to achieve this through hard power, regime change, sanctions, and threats of pre-emptive military intervention, Europe uses soft power, diplomacy, inclusion, and partnership.
When he became the leader of the Labor party less than three years ago, he also developed a new style of politics: instead of confrontation, dialogue; instead of exclusion, the politics of
inclusion.
It was this coalition, based on the politics of inclusion, which gave Barak his impressive victory: while Netanyahu won the 1996 election by a margin of 0.5%, Barak won this time by a margin of about 10%.
Bangladesh’s central bank, for example, has introduced rules to encourage financial inclusion, including requirements that banks use a percentage of their disbursements to strengthen agricultural and rural credit lines.
The first step in this process was the
inclusion
of Belarus in the EU's Eastern Partnership, a new framework for relations with six ex-Soviet republics in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus.
The post-2015 development agenda will continue where the MDGs left off, while adding further objectives relating to inclusion, sustainability, jobs, growth, and governance.
This policy of
inclusion
rather than exclusion is based on political pragmatism and the belief that this carnage can and must stop.
That’s why Cameron is demanding a limitation of the
inclusion
principle, even for intra-European economic migrants.
There is indeed much to be said for frontloading the home-country principle in EU rules: a migrant’s country of origin should continue to be responsible for providing social benefits for a certain number of years, until the
inclusion
principle is applied.
As a result, the tech giants, in particular, have achieved a new level of regulatory capture, allowing them to limit free speech when it serves their interests, expand into non-high-tech markets, and shape emerging global policy agendas, such as financial
inclusion
and e-commerce.
Greening Digital FinanceBEIJING – Digital finance has turned out to be an unexpected revolutionary, simply by enabling low-cost financial
inclusion.
Participation in the workforce is linked not only to income levels, but also to self-esteem, social inclusion, and social status.
Many grew from the simple proposition that ordinary people could overcome adversity in the marketplace by banding together to buy and sell goods at reasonable prices, and quickly realized the added benefits of sharing knowledge among members, promoting inclusion, and building social capital.
And now, in a more mobile and urban world, one might ask: can cooperatives maintain their essential character, based on
inclusion
and knowledge sharing within a community?
This provides a good opportunity to examine the extraordinary history of cooperatives, assess their strengths and weaknesses, and rekindle a discussion about a development model that promises higher levels of inclusion, ownership, self-determination, and concern for community.
That means not only greater economic inclusion, higher agricultural productivity, strengthened food security, and financial stability, but also lessons concerning responsible and sustainable business practices, corporate governance, and community relations.
And, if
inclusion
of that provision was not revealing enough, then there is the fact that the BRICS’ commitments to the CRA are expressed in US dollars.
China is pushing hard for the renminbi’s
inclusion.
To qualify for inclusion, the Chinese government has eased its capital controls and liberalized its financial markets considerably.
Inclusion
in the SDR basket would require continuing this process, which, together with the renminbi’s emergence as a globally investable currency, would benefit the entire world economy.
For now, China is focused on winning the renminbi’s inclusion, even with a small share, in the SDR currency basket.
Moreover, ratings agencies lack the tools to track consistently vital factors such as changes in social inclusion, the country’s ability to innovate, and private-sector balance-sheet risk.
Harnessing this technology to expand financial
inclusion
would be economically empowering, particularly for smallholder farmers and merchants in rural communities, who could use their mobile phones to access market-price data, transfer cash, make retail purchases, deposit income, and pay bills – all while tending their fields or shops.
Financial leaders have already begun to spread the word about such progress, and the policies that enabled it, in order to bolster and expand financial
inclusion.
In September 2011, at the AFI Global Policy Forum in Mexico, 17 financial authorities adopted the unprecedented Maya Declaration – a set of specific, measurable commitments aimed at increasing financial
inclusion.
Rather than waiting for solutions from American, European, or other advanced-country bankers, developing countries are leading the way toward financial inclusion, dramatically reshaping the global economy in the process.
Rather than focusing solely on income, sustainable development encourages cities, countries, and the world to focus simultaneously on three goals: economic prosperity, social inclusion, and environmental sustainability.
Social
inclusion
means that all members of society – rich and poor, men and women, majority and minority groups – should have equal rights and equal opportunities to benefit from rising prosperity.
The Chinese need to see how they benefit from
inclusion
– and how they would suffer from not being one of the countries shaping and buttressing today’s international institutions.
Citing the
inclusion
of Hezbollah members in Lebanon’s government, Saudi Arabia accused the country of declaring war on the Kingdom, and ordered its citizens to leave the country.
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