Inherent
in sentence
361 examples of Inherent in a sentence
First, as the Helsinki Final Act put it, every sovereign nation has an
inherent
right “to belong or not to belong to international organizations, to be or not to be a party to bilateral or multilateral treaties, including the right to be or not to be a party to treaties of alliance; they also have the right to neutrality.”
Second, the sovereign equality of states includes respect for all the rights
inherent
in sovereignty.
But Hamada’s inference that this illustrates the
inherent
dangers of monetary finance is not credible.
Here, undoubtedly, is a complicated strategy, and one with its own
inherent
pitfalls.
Such a calibrated approach, however, combining a differentiated understanding of the nature of Saddam's regime and its weaknesses, has a better chance of success than an outright assault, or the dangers
inherent
in allowing Saddam to remain in power.
This dual approach is subject to an
inherent
difficulty: deterrence is real and visible to everyone; but détente must also be real and visible if it is to play its part.
The political difficulties
inherent
in such a scheme would no doubt make agreement difficult.
Their study lends scientific supportto several such projects underway in Europe aimed at proving that hydrogen gas, converted from water via electrolysis – think of it as natural gas minus the polluting carbon – and stored, for example, in subterranean salt caverns, can smooth out fluctuations
inherent
in solar and wind energy.
There are
inherent
conflicts of interest: owners and managers have a natural incentive to present a picture as rosy as possible.
The
inherent
logic offers, perhaps for the first time, a sustainable growth paradigm that is suited to developing and developed countries alike.
After all, steel companies have an
inherent
need to hedge against fluctuations in the price of iron ore, just as airlines and utilities have an
inherent
need to hedge against fluctuations in the price of oil.
But on December 18, 2014, the ECJ reversed its 2011 ruling, determining that an unfertilized human ovum stimulated by parthenogenesis “does not constitute a human embryo, if it does not in itself have the
inherent
capacity of developing into a human being.”
In other words: readiness to defend a democratic state and its values against violence, aggression and evil should be nothing less than a natural extension of the
inherent
will of each individual to defend one's own dignity against potential threats.
There is no suggestion that Third World patients are deliberately being made ill when research is outsourced – unlike in the Guatemalan case – but that does not attenuate the
inherent
vulnerability of populations lacking basic medical care or experiencing epidemics.
Our society is awash with inflated information, which is
inherent
to efforts in many human activities – entertainment, law courts, stock markets, politics, and sports, to name but a few – to gain greater public attention in the framework of mass civilization.
But the end is approaching, and serious thought must be given to several
inherent
dangers in the Syrian situation.
It is against this background that the risks
inherent
in different kinds of reform should be assessed.
China and the US can draw important lessons from the strengths and weaknesses
inherent
in both systems.
The current crisis might indeed eventually break eurozone leaders’
inherent
resistance to compromise, collaboration, and common action.
This trust sustains Kohl's confidence that he can reconcile the contradictions
inherent
in Nato enlargement: an opening of the Alliance to new members, and a special arrangement between Nato and Russia (and also, incidentally, between Nato and Ukraine).
The blue economy would also help to resolve the intermittency problem
inherent
in solar- or wind-power systems.
Some African countries are comparatively stable and prosperous, and the Continent possesses a youthful population that will soon top one billion people, abundant mineral reserves, and an
inherent
dynamism.
First, it should get rid of the ambiguity
inherent
in the words “close to,” by setting a point target to provide clarity to the public – and to ECB Governing Council members – about what its monetary policy aims to achieve.
It is important here to keep in mind that containment, the dominant doctrine of the Cold War era, sought to push back against Soviet and Communist expansion – not just to limit the reach of Soviet power, but to frustrate it – in order to create a context in which the
inherent
flaws of communism and authoritarian rule would come to the fore.
With the exception of a small number of ideologically committed defenders of free enterprise, few were willing to take the risks
inherent
in letting major banks collapse.
But at least some of the maladies of the current parliamentary system, such as defection, party factionalism,
inherent
political instability, and crippling coalition politics can be minimized, if not eliminated, by adopting an executive-dominant model of presidential democracy.
It is that they should be much more open about the
inherent
limitations of their policy effectiveness in current circumstances.
But inconsistency is
inherent
to policymaking.
Once issues of technical safety are resolved, a fundamental objection to reprogenetics is its
inherent
unfairness to families unable to afford it.
Finally, the new rules must allow for financial markets’
inherent
instability.
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