Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
Nevertheless, such commonalities do not explain political and
radical
Islam.
The irrelevance of traditional culture explains the growing number of converts in all the recently discovered
radical
networks.
The
radical
and violent left in Europe today has abandoned these zones of social exclusion.
Free and fair presidential and parliamentary elections have brought to power leaders who, by implementing
radical
reforms, are determined to realize voters’ demands for a modern economy and an end to corruption.
A notorious example is postwar macroeconomic policymaking under the
radical
Keynesians.
Toledo, a Stanford graduate and a moderate politician, supported Humala during the campaign and provided him with economic advisers, which proved to be decisive in establishing the credibility of Humala’s retreat from
radical
policies.
The rise of
radical
Islamism has been no less obstructive when it comes to Arab democracy.
Decades of unholy alliance between Arab autocrats and the West have seen
radical
Islam emerge as a “salvation” force.
The
radical
case is that the pre-crisis economy crashed not because of preventable mistakes in banking, but because money had become the sole arbiter of value.
It means proposing
radical
reforms to create a more dynamic, fairer, and more secure society.
Furthermore, social environments that are characterized by lower levels of consensus and higher levels of violence may be more likely than their more harmonious counterparts to catalyze
radical
innovation.
Trump’s susceptibility to – even enthusiasm for –
radical
conspiracy theories is less easy to explain.
Indeed, it is this group, not the bourgeoisie or the
radical
proletariat, that has been behind past efforts to win Catalan independence.
Likewise, twice in the first half of the twentieth century, in response to an increasingly
radical
Catalan clerisy, the region’s industrialists ended up supporting authoritarian solutions from the Spanish government.
This recommendation may seem radical, but only because the view of a one-way flow of innovation from West to East has become so entrenched.
For the US public, the 444-day ordeal of the US embassy staff held hostage by
radical
Iranian students constituted a psychological shock that has still not abated.
But the party system and the FA’s internal balance of power do not favor any turn abrupt toward
radical
left or populism.
Today, that threat results from
radical
Islamism – a fundamentalist vision of society reordered according to Sharia law.
Beyond enduring untold suffering and violence, many of today’s refugees, from war-torn countries like Iraq and Syria, have imbibed
radical
Islamist ideology and, specifically, calls to jihad.
The only way to address the threat of terrorism effectively is to tackle the
radical
Islamist ideology that underpins it.
Its depression continues, whereas countries like Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia, which carried out early,
radical
fiscal adjustments and liberalized their economies, are enjoying strong growth.
Germany’s president had just appointed Adolf Hitler’s
radical
and aggressive government.
Reinvigorating the eurozone economy requires a more
radical
effort to resolve the interlinked sovereign-debt and banking crises.
The strategic options confront equally fresh terrain, perhaps similar to when mass media opened a new era of marketing, or globalization required
radical
reshaping of organizational footprints.
The public sector underwent rapid and
radical
decentralization as part of the transition, owing to the creation of the country’s quasi-federal governmental structure, which created significant overlap and duplication, both in terms of effort and resources.
Meanwhile, the global distribution of economic and political power has undergone a
radical
reconfiguration, setting the stage for the emergence of a multipolar international order.
While Bengal’s long secular tradition, which drove its efforts to break away from Pakistan, is still alive and well, the corrosive impact of the
radical
Islamists – who use force to silence those with whom they disagree – is undeniable.
The most successful and
radical
of these initiatives is the Chronic Care Model developed by Edward Wagner, an American doctor.
Perhaps a more
radical
solution to Russian bullying might have been to match Russia’s recent arbitrary ban on Ukrainian chocolate exports with a ban on Russian vodka exports to the EU.
If so, the Palestinian leaders themselves may well determine it is safer to say no than to sign on to a plan sure to disappoint many of their own people and leave them vulnerable to Hamas and other
radical
groups.
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