Organizations
in sentence
2499 examples of Organizations in a sentence
Indeed,
organizations
that are officially committed to involving all nations in their decision making are often controlled by small groups of powerful nations, while others merely go through the motions of participation.
It is now standard practice for international
organizations
publishing a report to involve all the "stakeholders" and to reflect their opinions.
So the evolving report is usually put up on a Web site and suggestions are invited from one and all--NGOs, trade unions, and other
organizations
of civil society.
Of course, other Israeli soldiers and civilians have been held captive in Arab states or abducted by terrorist
organizations
and other militant groups over the years.
Nato to Lebanon – but on one conditionThe current discussion surrounding an international force for southern Lebanon has focused almost exclusively on which countries and
organizations
– NATO, the European Union, the United Nations – will provide the troops.
Elsewhere it is probably best to include in the laws of countries and the statutes of
organizations
a clause that makes affirmative action lapse after five years, or at most ten.
One reason is that emerging digital media, and the race for scoops among news organizations, investigative journalists, increasingly active NGOs, are providing a constant stream of reasons for mistrust.
What would be easy arbitrage using the Internet and delivery services gets stopped in its tracks by trade
organizations
and manufacturers who convince legislators and/or bureaucrats to protect their monopoly rents.
Chinese media
organizations
are under constant scrutiny by the authorities, and editors have chafed at (and even attempted to defy) censorship.
Similarly, foreign media
organizations
often cannot investigate Chinese companies and economic activity freely and accurately.
Yes, media
organizations
must find ways to finance worthwhile reporting, investigation, and analysis.
The War Against Iraqi WomenBAGHDAD – Iraqi women’s
organizations
and international observers point to an escalating war against women in Iraq, aided by the widespread chaos and lawlessness under the US occupation.
Both
organizations
would do well to heed the pontiff’s words.
This requires further development and deepening of strategic relations with emerging powers, such as China, India, and Brazil, as well as with regional
organizations.
But there is reason to be optimistic: in Pakistan and Indonesia, encouraging examples show how partnerships among government, police, women’s groups, paralegals, and non-governmental
organizations
can work to strengthen women’s voice and agency, and thus their potential to contribute more fully to society.
In fact, the report, which reviewed 140
organizations
working in the global health sector, makes for disturbing reading.
Many of these
organizations
are falling embarrassingly short on addressing gender disparities.
Half of the organizations’ strategies do not include a specific commitment to gender equality; and while a third do focus on the health of women and girls, they make no mention of gendered risks.
According to the Global Health 50/50 report, only a third of
organizations
take a gendered approach to the health needs of the whole population, and no
organizations
target men and boys specifically.
Moreover, only 43% of the
organizations
that were surveyed have specific measures in place to support women’s careers in public health, despite the overwhelmingly female composition of the health workforce.
It should come as no surprise that the majority of these
organizations
are run by men.
For us, one of the report’s more dismaying findings is that two-thirds of the
organizations
do not disaggregate data by sex.
The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, the Bangladesh-based organization BRAC, Save the Children International, and The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria are among a dozen or so
organizations
that perform well across the board.
The successful
organizations
have all adopted clear policies and roadmaps for driving organizational change.
Looking ahead, we hope to see all global health
organizations
adopt concrete measures to address the shortcomings identified in the Global Health 50/50 report.
Failing that, we would recommend that next year’s report also rank the
organizations
in question, to make clear which of them are still falling behind.
After all, the experience of the most successful development
organizations
suggests that we should be skeptical about advanced technology’s power to bring about meaningful change for the poor.
Companies and
organizations
have shown that in hard-to-reach places in Africa and South Asia, women trained as micro-entrepreneurs are often best positioned to deliver essential goods and services to their villages, even if they have limited literacy and formal education.
At the height of the Industrial Age, the epoch of mass production was reflected in a politics that revolved around the mass
organizations
of society.
It is a “globally connected institution,” with more than 40 individual country partners and growing ties to other international
organizations.
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