Regimes
in sentence
1100 examples of Regimes in a sentence
By becoming a nuclear power, such
regimes
can ensure their own survival, promote their local or regional geopolitical interests, and even pursue an expansionist agenda.
Turkey is more dynamic and energetic than Russia, and its economy certainly is faring much better, but both
regimes
are overestimating the strength of their position and underestimating the cost of their autocratic turn.
It should also counsel a greater emphasis on international legitimacy and multilateral alliances in dealing with hostile
regimes.
Democracy is not a panacea, but non-democratic
regimes
usually pursue worse economic polices than democratic governments do.
The denunciation of popular protests is not just the province of autocratic
regimes.
The Soviet and other top-heavy
regimes
increasingly found themselves losing the battle of ideas and, as a result, the support of their own citizens.
Bases that exist at the whim of mercurial
regimes
cannot be a foundation for America’s security.
More importantly, they can debunk political myths central to the legitimacy of some
regimes.
As it stands, noncompliance with medication
regimes
is a major problem in treating NCDs.
Technologies that engage patients in their own health care and enable more seamless adherence to medication
regimes
have the potential to improve disease management, reduce hospitalization, and lower costs.
In developed countries, such values have been nurtured by decades of functioning "constitutional liberalism," including, as the author Fareed Zakaria noted,
regimes
that can be called "liberal autocracies," such as the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
In other municipalities and regions the majority continued to support authoritarian parties and reject classic liberal principles, under both liberal and illiberal
regimes.
Vital issues are at stake: the scramble for oil;China’s robust presence in Sudan; the West’s desire to see a mostly Christian state break the contiguity of Muslim
regimes
– and the consequent threat of Islamic radicalism – in the region; the regional distribution of the Nile’s waters; and the possibility that independence for the South might lead to Sudan’s total dismemberment along ethnic and religious lines.
It applauded the military takeover in Algeria in the early 1990’s aimed at curtailing the democratic emergence of an Islamist regime, and is happy to conduct business with authoritarian
regimes
throughout the Arab world.
It can hold the fort because it maintains one of the world’s strictest
regimes
of exchange and capital controls.
Meanwhile, America’s support for the
regimes
in Yemen and Saudi Arabia has contributed to the rise of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
The checks and balances that unions provide are essential in the workplace, but they are even more important in sustaining fledgling democratic
regimes.
Everywhere, incumbent
regimes
have mounted resistance.
In 1989, the fall of repressive East European
regimes
in quick succession stunned the world, including dissidents who had long recognized communism’s vulnerabilities.
Until recently, this failing did not pose an acute problem, because dictatorial
regimes
in the Middle East and Africa controlled the migratory pressure resulting from wars and failing economies.
The old order that has begun to vanish extends beyond the former
regimes.
The old regimes’ opponents have demonstrated bravery without recklessness, and differences of opinion without bigotry.
The Arab public is fully aware of the close alliances that existed between the West and the now-defunct despotic regimes, yet they have exhibited no desire for vengeance or retribution towards the West.
The rise of Islamist
regimes
throughout the Arab world, and the subsequent shift of regional alliances, has increased the Jewish state’s isolation.
As a first step, the GCC states are moving toward new tax
regimes
in early 2018, including a value-added tax, a corporation tax, property taxes, and taxes on fuel, tobacco, and alcohol.
National self-determination is a universal right that should not be denied to populations suffering under oppressive non-democratic
regimes.
Authoritarian clientelist
regimes
depend on the silent assent of their populations and the loyalty of their elites.
It also played a critical role in the collapse of communist
regimes
in Central and Eastern Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
It also called for greater coordination of tax
regimes
and border controls, stronger protection of the integrity of the internal market, and, in view of the rising threat of protectionism in the United States, a “made in Europe” procurement policy.
The Age of Blowback TerrorNEW DELHI – World powers have often been known to intervene, overtly and covertly, to overthrow other countries’ governments, install pliant regimes, and then prop up those regimes, even with military action.
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