Lessons
in sentence
1559 examples of Lessons in a sentence
Indeed, in the United States,
lessons
from the Katrina experience appear to have strengthened response capacity, as shown by the rapid and effective intervention following Hurricane Sandy.
Similar
lessons
were learned with respect to global supply chains, following the earthquake and tsunami that hit northeast Japan in 2011.
With attention and money flagging, it is vital that we step up our fight against this disease by adding
lessons
from cost-benefit analysis to our arsenal.
As the current Chair of the Global Forum on Migration and Development, Bangladesh is committed to ensuring that the
lessons
learned inform the global compact.
According to Santos, this new peace process is different, because it takes into account the
lessons
learned from past mistakes.
In October, James Watson, who shared the 1962 Nobel Prize for his description of the structure of DNA, was in London to promote his memoir, Avoid Boring People and Other
Lessons
From a Life in Science .
But they should not discount the valuable
lessons
offered by advanced-country central banks’ recent monetary-policy innovation.
But I agree with Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn that it is not wise to focus on teaching financiers
lessons
about moral hazard when doing so risks collateral damage in the form of the destruction of millions of jobs.
This wealth of experience all points in one direction: Keynes's teachings are still very much alive, and Argentina today would be in far better shape if his
lessons
had been taken to heart.
Nonetheless, there are
lessons
to be learned from the Norwegian constitution’s misguided anti-Jewish clause, which, it should be noted, was repealed just a few decades later.
Ten
Lessons
from North Korea’s Nuclear ProgramSEOUL – North Korea has produced a number of nuclear warheads and is developing ballistic missiles capable of delivering them around the world.
What follows are ten
lessons
that we ignore at our peril.
And those contrasts suggest useful
lessons
for other emerging countries.
The
lessons
of the 1990’s aren’t difficult to understand and are too important to ignore.
Three
lessons
for the rest of us come to mind.
None of these
lessons
should be lost on either Europe or the US.
So Asia’s structural
lessons
are equally important to the developed world.
Not all Asian countries walked the line to the same extent, and some opportunities for reform were undoubtedly lost, but important
lessons
were learned and institutions improved.
There are no shortcuts to progress on addressing these problems, but
lessons
from the region should inspire emulation.
And some countries do indeed differ from Egypt to such an extent as to make potential
lessons
misleading.
Yet, however complicated the blame game, some
lessons
can be drawn to guide future policy.
Even when they do, other companies and industries don’t seem to learn from it – or, worse, they learn the wrong
lessons.
We can all agree that the stakes in a better understanding of the
lessons
of macroeconomic history, and in avoiding future events like those of the last decade, are very high.
So what
lessons
should we draw from the inevitably messy nature of electoral processes in countries where there is either no middle class or only a rudimentary one, and where a democratic culture is at best in its infancy?
Their study holds two
lessons
that should be considered in evaluating the latest overhaul of the UK’s welfare system.
Yet some Chinese have recently discovered the virtues of the Nordic social model, and Chinese delegations have been coming to Oslo regularly to see what
lessons
they can bring home.
Russia must not learn the wrong
lessons
from the Georgia crisis: there can be no going back on fundamental principles of territorial integrity, democratic governance, and international law.
One shudders to think what
lessons
the US financial sector will draw if, after the multi-trillion dollar bailout, there are only superficial, toothless reforms.
ISIS’s leaders would not be happy with the comparison, but their group’s rapid emergence on the map has drawn some
lessons
from Israel.
Emerging markets’ external and fiscal positions have been stronger than ever, thanks to the hard
lessons
learned from their own crisis-prone history.
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