Laureate
in sentence
369 examples of Laureate in a sentence
But there is another target as well: Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Peace Prize
laureate
and opposition leader.
Bo will join a long line of incarcerated officials, though the special prisons where they are held may seem like recreation centers for retired senior officials when compared to the abusive and physically degrading conditions that the Nobel
laureate
Liu Xiaobo and other prisoners have had to endure.
Two recent books – Identity Economics by Nobel
laureate
George Akerlof and Rachel Kranton and The Moral Economy by Sam Bowles – indicate that a quiet revolution is challenging the foundations of the dismal science, promising radical changes in how we view many aspects of organizations, public policy, and even social life.
As the Nobel
laureate
economist Amartya Sen compellingly argues, hunger is not caused by a scarcity of food, but by a scarcity of democracy.
Japan seems to be making great strides toward its goal of recapturing the position as an Asian cultural center that it held a century ago, when the Indian Nobel
laureate
poet Rabindranath Tagore lived in Tokyo.
Nobel
laureate
Joseph Stiglitz provides further grounds for discounting the likelihood of faster tightening.
And Nobel
laureate
Robert Shiller agrees, warning that excessively low interest rates have created “overheated asset markets – real estate, equities, and long-term bonds – [which] could lead to a major correction and another economic crisis.”
Similarly, the Nobel
laureate
economist Amartya Sen speaks of our “multiple identities” – ethnic, religious, national, local, professional, and political – many of which cross national boundaries.
Amartya Sen, the Nobel
laureate
economist, has argued that we can learn to live with these multiple identities and even thrive with the diversity of citizenship and loyalties that they allow us.
And a United Nations advisory committee chaired by the Nobel
laureate
Joseph Stiglitz has argued for a new global reserve currency, possibly one based on the SDR.
Leon N. Cooper, a Nobel
laureate
in physics, offered a particularly compelling take.
The Commission on Growth and Development, chaired by the Nobel
laureate
economist Michael Spence, reached a similar conclusion in its 2008 report, The Growth Report: Strategies for Sustained Growth and Inclusive Development.
A century ago, the German Nobel
laureate
Paul Ehrlich introduced the concept of “magic bullets” – compounds engineered to target and kill tumor cells or disease-causing organisms without affecting normal cells.
The pro-democracy leader and Nobel
laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi was released from house arrest; her party won seats in parliament; and millions of Burmese are now studying their country’s constitution and have petitioned for amendments.
Perhaps the most well-known recent example has been the Nobel
laureate
Paul Krugman’s campaign against the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, in which he moved quickly from criticism of an error in one of their papers to charges about their commitment to academic transparency.
The first, essential step is for MENA countries to become “learning societies,” a phrase coined by the Nobel
laureate
economist Joseph E. Stiglitz to describe countries in which shared knowledge leads to increased innovation.
The Nobel
laureate
economist Michael Spence has pointed out that after WWII, only a handful of countries were able to grow to a fully-industrialized level of development.
Klimov’s approach echoed that of Svetlana Alexievich – this year’s Nobel
laureate
in literature – in her first book, War’s Unwomanly Face, published the year before.
Moreover, this summer, the writer and literary critic Sarah Danius became the first woman in 200 years to serve as the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, which chooses the Nobel
laureate
in literature.
In fact, a tax on foreign-exchange transactions – the so-called “Tobin tax,” advocated by the late Nobel
laureate
economist James Tobin – might be the simplest way to go.
How else could Liu Binjie, China’s censor-in-chief and the point man for silencing the Nobel
laureate
writer and human-rights activist Liu Xiaobo, be invited to lead a delegation of 21 officially sanctioned writers and dozens of ministerial minions to London to celebrate Chinese literature at the London Book Fair?
In his book Making Globalization Work, the Nobel
laureate
economist Joseph Stiglitz points out that the United States would not be at the forefront of the global cotton industry were it not for government subsidies.
The textbook example given by the Nobel
laureate
Paul Samuelson is that of a town’s best lawyer who is also its best typist.
The idea of taxing financial transactions dates back to John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s and was taken up by Yale professor and Nobel
laureate
James Tobin (who, incidentally, was my undergraduate professor) in the 1970s.
Even Nobel
laureate
Joseph Stiglitz has questioned whether these countries’ debt payment measures represent an exaggerated concession to neo-liberal orthodoxy.
In short, Wilson would endorse a program more like that of Democratic US Senator Elizabeth Warren or Nobel
laureate
Joseph Stiglitz, featuring an advanced social-welfare system that enables broad-based prosperity.
Spotting this reversal, the Nobel
laureate
economist Michael Spence has argued that the world is poised for The Next Convergence.
The late Elinor Ostrom, a Nobel
laureate
in economics, showed that human societies have built myriad creative and lasting solutions to resolve a wide range of dilemmas involving the use of common resources.
Desmond Tutu is Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town and a Nobel Peace Prize
laureate.
But many, such as the Nobel
laureate
economist Angus Deaton, have criticized the World Bank’s overall performance.
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