Integration
in sentence
2478 examples of Integration in a sentence
The EU
integration
process is also proving a powerful driver for much-needed reform in Bosnia.
This outcome, of course, would involve greater
integration.
So this most ambitious project of European
integration
might still fail.
The United States, in the past a staunch supporter of European integration, would likely adopt a policy of bilateral special relationships with individual European states.
And if the commitment to introduce monetary union and a common currency is broken, the backlash could deal a fatal blow to European
integration.
ASEAN has also contributed to building one of the most dynamic economic-integration platforms in the world, and now acts as a de facto regional hub of wider economic cooperation and
integration.
Indeed, the importance of regional economic
integration
for global stability and security cannot be understated.
That said, the wide disparities and development gaps between ASEAN members call for a multi-track and multi-speed approach to deepening economic
integration.
What could have otherwise been a liability – ASEAN's diversity – was transformed into an asset that has set the benchmark for regional
integration
in a troubled and complex world.
Given its strong economy, Poland could be a powerful ally to France and Germany in a post-Brexit Europe that is working toward deeper
integration.
Technocracy has been a central feature of European
integration
from the beginning.
As European technocrats have pushed for covert
integration
to resolve the euro and refugee crises, the populists have struck back even harder.
Eurocrats have long likened European
integration
to riding a bicycle: one must keep moving forward or fall down.
Although many European politicians are loath to admit it, the status quo is probably not sustainable; eventually, there must be either significantly greater fiscal
integration
or a chaotic break-up.
The last decade – until the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 – was known as the Great Moderation, a period of low inflation and strong growth that reflected major new developments, such as global
integration
of emerging markets and major central banks’ adoption of inflation-targeting regimes during the 1990’s.
In fact, Germany – whose economic progress since the end of World War II has been driven by its consistent openness to international trade and economic integration, and which remains one of Europe’s most open and trade-dependent economies – would be among the main beneficiaries of the TTIP.
The appeal of such forces is particularly pronounced in the EU, owing to the popular perception that European
integration
has weakened national sovereignty and left citizens subject to decision-making by unelected technocrats.
The EU insists on the innocence of its model of
integration.
In 2010, France has the “blues,” and some people are starting to see, through the failure of the national team, the limits of the French model of
integration.
A new approach is needed: the European Union should use the prospect of European
integration
as the way to promote regional
integration.
The euro has successfully protected Europe against exchange-rate risks, and it is a useful step towards further European
integration.
This inter-state rivalry – at times bordering on acrimony – is what makes the politics of European
integration
difficult.
Whatever route it takes, Europe in the coming years will have to address the weak representation of the common interest – or else admit that no such common interest can justify remaining on the path of
integration.
In the 1960s, there was much discussion about Latin American
integration.
But there is no shortage of regional leaders who could carry the torch of trade
integration
from the Rio Grande to the Cabo de Hornos.
The Greens, on the other hand, are keen on deepening European integration; but that is not their first priority, and they are the smallest party at the table.
To reap the benefits, sub-Saharan Africa must form an oil-based confederation under the tutelage of thoroughly reformed regional groupings aimed at encouraging economic
integration
and political union.
Europe, Asia, and, increasingly, Latin America, are showing that regional
integration
provides the healthiest path to development.
This process has been accelerated by a confluence of defense-industry reforms, comprehensive military upgrading, and
integration
of innovative operational concepts.
Although the Conservatives did manage a narrow victory in the next election, the party’s internal fissure over European
integration
deepened, and by the end of the 1990s, Labour was back in power (and would remain there for more than a decade).
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