Published
in sentence
1368 examples of Published in a sentence
On February 12, a “collective” of anthropologists, sociologists, and historians
published
a virulent attack in Le Monde.
It has been more than seven years since my colleagues at Goldman Sachs and I first
published
an outlook to 2050 in which we suggested that the four BRIC economies could emerge bigger than the G-7 economies, and, together with the United States, would constitute the world’s five largest.
Reepalu had to retract his claim as soon as the interview was
published.
Africa’s ArrivalNEW YORK – The African Development Bank (AfDB) has just
published
its African Economic Outlook for 2018.
The ECB recently
published
a report saying that food prices will most likely increase further, because demand is structurally higher than supply.
The deep corruption of the Harvard University team chosen to “help” Russia in its transition, described in a detailed account
published
in 2006 by Institutional Investor, reinforced these beliefs.
In the decade before Luther’s theses, Wittenberg printers published, on average, just eight books annually, all in Latin and aimed at local university audiences.
Pettegree calculates that a third of all books
published
during this period were written by Luther himself, and that the pace of publishing continued to increase after his death.
Luther effectively
published
a piece of writing every two weeks – for 25 years.
In an interview
published
in 2008 in the Church of Scotland’s magazine Life and Work, she supported the right of those suffering intolerably to end their lives.
The Global Times, an English-language tabloid
published
by the Chinese Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily, took a particularly belligerent tone.
Several months earlier, in June 2016, the US Securities and Exchange Commission
published
a rule, under Section 1504 of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, requiring oil, gas, and mining companies to disclose all payments made to governments on a project-by-project basis.
In 1925, Harper’s Magazine
published
an article about the dangers of “fake news.”
In 2015, the year after the release of the WHO’s report, the journal Public Health Ethics
published
a special issue devoted entirely to this topic.
And I fully understand the desire to purchase the subsequent issue of Charlie Hebdo,
published
– with bravery and determination – a week after the attack.
But to embrace the images they
published
as a statement of Enlightenment conviction weakens the values that are essential to a civilized society.
It also
published
a list of Web sites that the Australian government proposed blocking, the extreme-right British National Party’s membership roll, an analysis of a major Icelandic bank’s default risk, and video footage of a US helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed 12 people, including a Reuters journalist and photographer.
The catalyst for what came to be known as “Barricades Week” was an interview
published
in the German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung with the parachute general Jacques Massu, in which he said that part of the army regretted having called de Gaulle back to power, did not understand his policy, and was disappointed that he had become “a man of the left.”
An article
published
late last year in the official media by a prominent retired People’s Liberation Army general describes the North Korean regime as terminal.
It is probably no coincidence that three days after the new Italian government revealed its economic plan – which, if implemented, will blow up the eurozone – 154 German economists
published
a manifesto strongly opposing any substantial eurozone reform.
They have just been
published
in English and Chinese, but cannot be legally distributed in China.
They had not
published
the results, they explained, because the drug’s development had been abandoned for commercial reasons.
According to the
published
accounts of these experimental releases, the approach was highly effective, reducing the infected mosquito population by 80% in the Cayman Islands and by 90% in Brazil.
Recent books
published
in the West reflect this, with titles like What is Islam?
The UN Environment Program’s just
published
report Bridging the Emissions Gap shows that over the course of this century, warming will likely rise to four degrees unless we take stronger action to cut emissions.
Jane Jacobs’s insights on this,
published
more that 40 years ago, have been confirmed by more recent studies summarized in books by Edward Glaeser and Enrico Moretti.
Although the authors used an untenable benchmark to determine that the sensitivity of pay to performance was too low, the article was
published
in a top economic journal, prominently discussed in the Harvard Business Review, and is one of the most cited papers in economics.
The paper was
published
in a minor journal and is not very well cited.
On the other, there is what Harvard’s Yascha Mounk calls, in his newly
published
book, “undemocratic liberalism”: regimes that protect individual rights and legal equality, but delegate public policymaking to unelected technocratic bodies like central banks and the European Commission.
When first produced and published, these ideas seem almost irrelevant, and at any rate out of tune with the spirit of the times.
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