Reconstruction
in sentence
405 examples of Reconstruction in a sentence
NATO has created a Comprehensive Crisis and Operations Management Center that brings together civilian and military expertise on crisis identification, planning, operations, reconstruction, and stabilization capabilities in ways that are explicitly designed to connect NATO headquarters in Europe to “the networked world.”
While
reconstruction
– both literal and figurative – is commencing in some parts of the region, countries like Syria are aflame.
Although inflows of international financial assistance remain substantial,
reconstruction
money from abroad will begin to dry up as Iraq puts its central government in place.
Economic
reconstruction
is more accurately thought of as economic renewal .
The US is making available more than $2 billion to support early
reconstruction
efforts.
So, besides helping the country find a political solution, there is also a need to focus on long-term
reconstruction
and reconciliation, so that young lives distorted by the civil war can be righted and children can be rescued from the harmful influence of so much violence and bloodshed.
Once Central Asia is stabilized and inoculated from Islamic unrest, China and Russia hope to invest their resources in other more important matters, such as the
reconstruction
of their economies.
When the Syrian conflict finally ends, three of its defining features will complicate
reconstruction
efforts.
Only then can Syria’s
reconstruction
begin.
Over the last 13 years, the mission has played a key role in preserving peace, supporting reconstruction, and advancing critical social goals, including improving women’s access to justice.
Four months after a major earthquake, a devastating tsunami, and the start of persistent nuclear uncertainties, a comprehensive
reconstruction
program has yet to be launched.
Although one of the main goals of
reconstruction
must be the creation of a democratic system that the Tamils regard as their own, establishing effective governance, and fast, in Sri Lanka’s north matters just as much.
Some of what needs to be done, including the sequencing of
reconstruction
measures, is now better understood – not least due to the different recent experiences in rebuilding Bosnia, Colombia, and other war-torn states.
The scale of the needed support is comparable to the Marshall Plan, which committed 1% of the United States’ GDP per year to help European
reconstruction
after World War II.
If we are sincere in our desire to slow the exodus to Europe, to prevent the radicalization of children, and to prepare for Syria’s reconstruction, we must see education, not emigration (much less extremism), as a child’s passport to the future.
Blair is the first leader of a major European country with no memories of WWII or the hardships of post-war
reconstruction.
Reconstruction
efforts in Bosnia failed to generate momentum because the size of the territory is too small and the various governmental entities, from federal to local, insist on having their not-so-clean fingers in every pie.
It establishes three working groups: for democratization and human rights; for economic reconstruction, development and cooperation; and for security issues.
A number of other steps would be necessary: credit facilities for
reconstruction
and investment; technical assistance for establishing the rule of law; support for education, management training, independent media and civil society.
What is at stake is more than the
reconstruction
of Kosovo.
The rebuilding of Bosnia-Hercegovina stands as a vivid example of a flawed
reconstruction.
Because this war time destruction was concentrated, some of the
reconstruction
aid will also be concentrated.
The EU would do well, in this regard, to copy a page from the history of the
reconstruction
of Western Europe after World War II.
In as much as the integration of Kosovo into the regional economy is the eventual objective, it would be well to allow now for regional authorities to participate in the
reconstruction
plans.
In order to succeed, they must look beyond the
reconstruction
of any single province, and plan, in concrete, practical steps, for the development of the region as a whole.
Soon after the disaster, the government announced that
reconstruction
demand and higher prices would bring about relatively rapid economic recovery.
But Japan’s neighbors expect rapid
reconstruction
and normalization, and for that, stronger political leadership is needed.
The country remains in ruins, and
reconstruction
has yet to begin.
This does not just undermine their own futures; it will impede their ability to use their skills to aid in their countries’
reconstruction.
Only then can we provide a foundation for true
reconstruction
and unleash the hope that all children deserve.
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