Organizations
in sentence
2499 examples of Organizations in a sentence
Such reporting, which may be delivered even by traditional news organizations, can be very damaging, not least for political leaders.
Yet many media organizations, including two leading newspapers, Asahi and Mainichi, continued to report on the supposed scandal – leaving out the testimony of Hatta and Kato, while providing an extensive account of Maekawa’s accusations.
But even during the most ruthless phases of Western capitalism, civil society in Europe and the US was made up of a huge network of
organizations
independent of the state – churches, clubs, parties, societies, and associations that were available to all social classes.
Jihadist
organizations
attempt to exploit discontent among marginalized groups in unstable societies.
They are all cases in which powerful individuals and
organizations
tried to obfuscate, deceive, or hide behind a front.
Exemptions are based on medical conditions, and are given to university students and employees of certain
organizations
(for example, the police).
But if a ceasefire has not been achieved in the next three months, the US should work with regional
organizations
and all friends of the Syrian people to authorize a set of military strikes on Al Qaeda-linked forces and on the killing machine that Assad’s government has aimed at civilians.
The most plausible explanation is that, as
organizations
with non-elected leaders and limited transparency, central banks tend to function as clubs whose largely male membership hire and promote familiar types; governments usually reinforce this by simply rubber-stamping the banks’ preferred candidate for the top job.
Thanks to the leadership of African countries that have made agricultural development a priority, and to the tireless efforts of many international organizations, real progress is being made against hunger and poverty on the continent.
Other projects – including those supported by the United States’ Feed the Future program, the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program, and
organizations
such as the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa – are finding new ways to bolster the productivity of small farmers across the developing world.
The government enforces draconian anti-defamation legislation and compels many media
organizations
to buy $40,000 bonds that are forfeited if the government wins a defamation suit.
Martin Rapaport, chairman of the group, has called for free access to the diamond fields by non-governmental
organizations
and industry representatives to monitor the human rights situation.
To capitalize on the development progress already made, countries and
organizations
must learn from one another, adapting solutions to local conditions.
Today, cooperatives cover a range of activities and come in a variety of shapes and sizes, from small-scale agricultural and consumer
organizations
in Africa to some of the leading agricultural brands and largest financial-service providers in North America and Europe.
The Bank’s policy work has re-affirmed the notion that rural producer
organizations
are fundamental building blocks of agricultural development.
First introduced in the 1980s and revived by every Republican administration since, the policy blocks American foreign aid to
organizations
that offer abortion services, counseling, referrals, or advocacy.
The Global Health, Empowerment, and Rights Act (HER Act), introduced last year, would prohibit the application of restrictive eligibility requirements for foreign nongovernmental
organizations
that receive US assistance.
Most of them probably depend directly on donations from the Koch brothers and the lobbying
organizations
that they secretly finance.
And if defaults on loans to corporations are widespread, as these
organizations
predict, the implications for the banks could be dire.
Last month, the UN launched a joint action plan with governments, businesses, foundations, and civil-society
organizations
to advance this vital cause.
Some of the reasons why this is happening reflect fundamental changes in the world, including the diffusion of power to an increasing number of states and non-state actors, ranging from terrorist
organizations
and militias to corporations and NGOs.
Add to that the emergence of an indigenous intelligentsia in the region, exemplified by
organizations
like the AfDB, and it seems that Africa’s moment may have arrived at last.
Given the absence of any regulation regarding fairness in news coverage of campaigns, the blatant corruption of many news organizations, and the absence of a current affairs program on national, prime-time television, banning the purchase of airtime merely erects an insurmountable barrier to potential new political entrants.
A fairly wide territorial distribution of economic activity, together with strong local governments and civil-society organizations, has contributed further to a general sense of contentment – a sense that is absent in much of the world nowadays.
Whether amateur, criminal, or governmental, many
organizations
– both domestic and foreign – are skilled at reverse engineering how tech platforms parse information.
As these examples suggest, today's information age has been marked by the growing role of non-governmental
organizations
(NGO's) on the international stage.
Nor do numbers tell the whole story, because they represent only formally constituted
organizations.
A few decades ago, large
organizations
like multinational corporations or the Roman Catholic Church were the most typical type of transnational organization.
Such
organizations
remain important, but the reduced cost of communication in the Internet era has opened the field to loosely structured network
organizations
with little headquarters staff and even to individuals.
A rough way to gauge the increasing importance of transnational
organizations
is to count how many times these
organizations
are mentioned in mainstream media publications.
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