Recognized
in sentence
1630 examples of Recognized in a sentence
Regrettably, there are no indications yet that the problem is
recognized
in Washington as a serious one.
The IMF has, at last,
recognized
the failure of its big bailout policies - failures all too evident in Thailand, Indonesia, Korea, Russia, Brazil, and most recently, in Argentina.
President Bush
recognized
that a fiscal stimulus was needed when he arrived in office, but rather than pushing for genuine stimulus, it pushed for regressive tax changes under the name of a fiscal stimulus.
Too much dependence on American power has warped the development of Japanese democracy in ways that are not always sufficiently
recognized
by the US.
This was
recognized
by the DPJ, which would like Japan to play a more independent role, as a more equal ally, rather than a mere protectorate, of the US, and thus be a more assertive political player in Asia.
Congress enacted a series of laws – sometimes over President Gerald Ford’s veto – prohibiting the US from offering aid to governments that violated internationally
recognized
human rights, even if those governments were firm Cold War allies.
Though Turkey currently has no plans to develop a fuel cycle of its own, its ambitious agenda for developing nuclear power has made policymakers intent on safeguarding the rights
recognized
by the NPT, including the right to enrich uranium.
It would perhaps be better if we
recognized
the limits our own explanatory ability, but there may be some adaptive value of those limits as well.
But that rule is rightly
recognized
as being potentially dysfunctional.
This process has many resonances elsewhere on the continent, which should be
recognized
as pan-European integration is addressed at the upcoming Helsinki European Council meeting.
The G-20
recognized
in 2008 that unfettered finance can generate costly crises; thus, it decided to re-regulate finance.
The failure of that effort is implicitly
recognized
in the guidelines, which indicate that they do not imply any new obligations under IMF surveillance.
Neither the authorities nor the markets
recognized
this prior to the crisis, attesting to the fallibility of both.
That was the origin of the euro crisis, but it was not
recognized
at the time – and is not properly understood even today.
Europe needed this rebalancing of powers so that it could be
recognized
as a fully democratic polity.
Many have been formally
recognized
as refugees by the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in the countries to which they initially fled.
These could include shared office spaces, financial solutions that smooth out income between work assignments, training programs, and the creation of widely
recognized
credentials to enable independent workers to advance their work and income opportunities.
None of these efforts has been perfect, but they have given victims a voice and
recognized
their suffering, while signaling to culprits that their crimes will not be forgotten.
Fewer, however, have
recognized
that the least bad military option – the one implied by US President Donald Trump’s insistence that China take responsibility for its dangerous neighbor – is a Chinese invasion, or regime change forced through China’s threat to launch one.
And the wealthy in these countries
recognized
that if globalization worked as it should, there would be enough benefits to go around.
The old institutions have
recognized
the need for reform, but they have been moving at glacial speed.
Such businesses are also leveraging their broad access and widely
recognized
brands to expand their role in the financial-services sector.
Women's rights have long been
recognized
– though all too often not respected – as human rights.
Adam Smith
recognized
this even before David Ricardo explained the virtue of free trade.
He interpreted the answers as measuring “public optimism” and “the intangible mental attitude which is
recognized
as one vital element in the week-to-week fluctuations of business activity.”
Surprisingly, hope is strongest in Burma, where the military junta
recognized
the need for change, exemplified in the 2010 decision to free the long-imprisoned Nobel Peace laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and embark on a transition to democracy.
But whereas Burma’s generals
recognized
the need to escape their cul-de-sac, the Malay and Thai elites seem to be doubling down on political exclusion.
It was great to see him again and to see him
recognized
for his efforts.
In India, as elsewhere, there will always be a choice between a world of edicts and crusades, where orthodoxies rule and foreign heresies are ruthlessly suppressed, and a world in which the virtues of tolerance, dissent, and cooperation are
recognized
and practiced.
China’s legitimate demand to be accepted as a joint rule-maker, not just a rule-follower, has to be
recognized.
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