Institutions
in sentence
6844 examples of Institutions in a sentence
Now there's a problem there, and we'll come back to it in a minute, which is that if you bring the most powerful together to make the rules in treaty-based institutions, to fill that governance space, then what happens to the weak who are left out?
It's its capacity to lock together its
institutions.
They group together, they form
institutions.
We can introduce it to schools and workplaces and other institutions, like Democracy In Practice is doing in Bolivia.
We're trying to be part of this global village, but at the same time we're revising ourselves through our cultural
institutions
and cultural development.
Yes, we do have all the resources that we need in order to develop new cultural institutions, but what I think is more important is that we are very fortunate to have visionary leaders who understand that this can't happen from outside, it has to come from within.
Government
institutions
were completely decapitated, including the presidential palace.
Our most important institutions, our schools and our workplaces, they are designed mostly for extroverts and for extroverts' need for lots of stimulation.
We broke down the old
institutions
and brought liberty to the oppressed.
The Hirshhorn sits among the Mall's monumental
institutions.
And those twin revolutions in electricity will bring to that sector more numerous and profound and diverse disruptions than any other sector, because we've got 21st century technology and speed colliding head-on with 20th and 19th century institutions, rules and cultures.
And
institutions
can learn from this.
Because
institutions
at the moment confine their data with copyright restrictions and that sort of thing.
Because the Web of the ancient manuscripts of the future isn't going to be built by
institutions.
And I think that
institutions
should stand up and release all their data under unrestricted licenses, and it would be a great benefit to everybody.
While affirmative action can increase the presence of minorities at elite educational institutions, she felt that it could also disadvantage hardworking people of different races from more affluent backgrounds.
Our opaque
institutions
from the Industrial Age, everything from old models of the corporation, government, media, Wall Street, are in various stages of being stalled or frozen or in atrophy or even failing, and this is now creating a burning platform in the world.
And we need to change and open up all of our
institutions.
Now, I think, in fact, we're at a turning point in human history, where we can finally now rebuild many of the
institutions
of the Industrial Age around a new set of principles.
And everywhere, our
institutions
are becoming naked.
Institutions
are becoming naked, and if you're going to be naked, well, there's some corollaries that flow from that.
People started to learn about things, and when they did, the
institutions
of feudal society appeared to be stalled, or frozen, or failing.
These two sectors, let me describe to you, have their own indigenous
institutions.
Go back to Africa's indigenous institutions, and this is where we charge the Cheetahs to go into the informal sectors, the traditional sectors.
While initially targeting sex discrimination within admissions, Title IX has actually evolved over time to require educational
institutions
to intervene and address gender violence when committed by certain parties, such as when teachers, students or campus visitors commit sexual assault or harassment.
It is Title IX that requires educational
institutions
to take reports of gender violence seriously, or to suffer liability.
And through campus-level proceedings, Title IX goes so far as to give victims equitable rights during the campus process, which means that victims can represent their own interests during proceedings, rather than relying on educational
institutions
to do so.
And that's really important, because educational
institutions
have historically swept gender violence under the rug, much like our criminal justice system does today.
Creating our own program to solve problems, like fighting corruption, building institutions, stabilizing the micro economy.
If our
institutions
are all failing and beyond hope for reform, a natural response is to seek to smash the machine, drain the swamp, burn the empire to the ground, on the hope that whatever rises out of the ashes is bound to be better than what we have now.
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