Leadership
in sentence
4104 examples of Leadership in a sentence
This is the right approach for those in China's
leadership
who wish to extract maximum benefits from the WTO to bolster domestic reform.
Strong US
leadership
is required to push the WTO in this direction while avoiding an EU-style future (regulatory overload) or a UN-style future (an irrelevant talking shop).
For this, they need leadership, which net activists tend to reject, because they view themselves as pure grassroots movements.
This hope was reinforced through the 1990s and 2000s, when officials began to experiment with elections at the village level, and the CPC
leadership
changed regularly after two terms.
But it was also defined by adherence to Deng’s “four cardinal principles”: the socialist road; the people’s democratic dictatorship; the
leadership
of the CPC; and Marxism, Leninism, and Mao Zedong Thought.
This deep social and intellectual transformation underway in Asia promises to catapult it from economic power to global
leadership.
These trends suggest that China will be a major source of both energy demand and cutting-edge technology, implying that it will have a unique opportunity to provide global
leadership.
Its assertion of
leadership
included cracking down on anyone who protested the overthrow of Egypt’s first-ever freely elected president, Mohammed Morsi.
Instead of a simple rotation of elites in power, perhaps what occurred during his time in office was the advent of political
leadership
that looks, talks, worships, and loves like the people of the country –
leadership
that identifies with and benefits the millions of Venezuelans who previously were marginalized.
With little hope of restoring Venezuela’s regional authority, Maduro will have to focus on safeguarding his tenuous
leadership
position at home.
Japan’s diplomatic isolation strengthens those in the Chinese
leadership
who have long sought to marginalize what is economically and militarily still Asia’s most powerful nation, while sucking other states in the region deeper into China’s shadow.
If implemented, the US could reassert its historical
leadership
among a group of countries that share its fundamental values, as well as an interest in inclusive economic growth and rising living standards.
When local responders are supported in
leadership
roles, the results are exceptional.
After more than 60 years of changes in military
leadership
coming only after coups, the civilian-led government replaced the commander of the armed forces at the end of his term.
The Palestinian crisis is first and foremost one of
leadership.
This year happened to be one of
leadership
transition, so the third plenum became more important.
To build the innovative economy envisioned by the third plenum, the CCP’s
leadership
needs to find a new governance model that fosters a vibrant society.
Here, too, China’s
leadership
has already caught on.
Indeed, it is widely expected that a new system of collective
leadership
will emerge if Kim Jong-il is incapacitated.
The problem is that North Korea has no experience with collective
leadership.
One-man rule has been so completely embedded in North Korea’s political culture and system that it is difficult to expect collective
leadership
to succeed.
But the problem with military rule is a tendency toward incomplete understanding of the implications of political decisions – a problem that will be aggravated further by collective
leadership.
Under a North Korean collective
leadership
dominated by the military, the power of the country’s economic bureaucrats will be marginal, at best.
Of the three, it is the army
leadership
that has the clearest means of ridding the country of Pakistan’s president in uniform, Pervez Musharraf.
Musharraf’s rule has given the military
leadership
a strong role in policymaking, but his eight years in office have badly damaged domestic support for the army’s influence within the government.
The army
leadership
ordered elections, permitted the formation of a civilian government, and then stage-managed the political process from the wings.
And
leadership
for this huge revolutionary effort will probably have to come from visionary business executives whose profits depend on education and rationality.
It is our task – with the support of the new Bosnian
leadership
– to redirect this approach to a genuine European mindset.
Despite the country’s worrisome political stalemate, and the seeming entrenchment, at least for the moment, of ethnic politics, the chance to grab the “low-hanging fruit” of visa liberalization did encourage the Bosnian
leadership
to make a serious effort at reform in a relatively short period of time.
Burgeoning oil wealth bolstered the regime’s credibility – not least by enabling a significant increase in military spending – and rising economic and military strength gave the Soviet Union’s geriatric
leadership
a rejuvenated sense of invulnerability.
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