Navigate
in sentence
309 examples of Navigate in a sentence
And workers of the future will require training in ethics, to help them
navigate
a world in which the value of human beings can no longer be taken for granted.
We won’t stop playing tennis just because robots start winning Wimbledon; but new organizational and communication skills will be required to help
navigate
changes in how humans create and play.
It is clearly helpful for immigrants to get hints about how to
navigate
daily life practically – such as norms about standing in line.
Fortunately, Trump has a strong team in place to help
navigate
complex foreign-policy issues.
Both the ad hoc and the global public-goods schools shy away from this question, and yet without at least some working answer, we will lack the compass needed to
navigate
our increasing global interdependence.
But as the line between news producer and consumer blurs, it is becoming increasingly difficult to
navigate
the swamp of misinformation.
But media literacy for today’s world means equipping people of all ages with the means to
navigate
an increasingly convoluted information ecosystem.
Network support has enabled members to
navigate
technical roadblocks and secure political support at home.
If we do not develop the ways and means to spot and
navigate
around possible new risks, the outlook for this exciting new technology will be uncertain.
The mail managers will also handle incoming messages and Facebook, LinkedIn, and other requests as specified by the recipient, and will collect credit card information from senders (or more likely charge their PayPal accounts or
navigate
other payment systems as they emerge).
As a result, the US Navy has had to launch new missions to demonstrate its right to
navigate
the waters demarcated by China’s “nine-dash line.”
Yet very few have support networks to
navigate
re-entry to society.
Otherwise, the shift will prove to be only a stop on an uncertain path – politically more complicated and economically harder to
navigate
– toward an even less stable destination.
Venezuela will be the first country to
navigate
the new rules; the country can ill afford to get it wrong.
Such shortcuts help us
navigate
the complexities of our social existence.
They may serve us well as we
navigate
our daily challenges, but they leave out many details and can backfire when we find ourselves in an environment in which our categorizations and ready-made explanations fit less well.
Scholars who are able to
navigate
from one explanatory framework to another as circumstances require are more likely to point us in the right direction.
Myriad overlapping programs with different eligibility rules are difficult for the poor to navigate, create bad work incentives, and are unnecessarily costly to taxpayers.
To
navigate
the current era of global turbulence, the world will need forward-facing ideas.
When ships
navigate
the Arctic, pollutants like sulphur oxide and black carbon are deposited onto the ice and snow.
China can repair these relationships – but only if it can
navigate
the historical issues in which many of today’s conflicts are rooted.
This year, however, the British electorate must
navigate
more than the ordinary amount of election-time dissimulation.
By incurring debt, states trade an element of sovereignty – the flexibility to alter course over time in response to the electorate’s demands – for the ability to fund expenditures without being compelled to
navigate
the political minefield of raising taxes.
The collateral effect, however, is that even honest officials are now too frightened to help corporations to
navigate
India’s maze of bureaucracy.
The Bank’s next president must translate into policy the blurry distinction between “developed” and “developing” countries, and
navigate
an environment characterized by a bewildering array of development actors, many of them private and focusing on narrow objectives, though often with budgets larger than traditional agencies.
More importantly, it is very likely that countries’ abilities to
navigate
the rising social tensions generated by gaping inequality could separate the winners and losers in the next round of globalization.
Lack of trust in elites is probably healthy at some level, but numerous polls indicate that it is in rapid decline, which surely increases citizens’ reluctance to delegate authority to
navigate
an uncertain global economic environment.
Worryingly, “Copenhagen 2” will not only have to
navigate
this complicated terrain, but it must do so in less than five years.
China’s leaders must
navigate
complex and conflicting pressures, as they seek to address domestic economic inequalities, manage relations with an insecure and isolationist US, cooperate effectively with the rest of the world, and pursue effective climate action.
How Kenya and Zimbabwe
navigate
their future relationships with China remains to be seen.
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