Report
in sentence
3145 examples of Report in a sentence
Facts are holy, but not all media that claim to
report
them, “new” or old, can be trusted.
According to a 2016 World Health Organization report, one of every four adults was sexually abused as a child.
As for liquidity, while on the surface it looks deeper, the joint
report
on the Flash Crash prepared by the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission shows that HFT traders scaled back liquidity sharply, thereby exacerbating the problem.
The Education Commission, as we are known, was there to present findings from our latest report, The Learning Generation, and to share ideas with the country’s leadership on paying for education and improving outcomes.
Under a later government, Macierewicz published a
report
on Poland’s counterintelligence agency, the Military Information Services, which outed undercover Polish intelligence agents and led to the disbanding of the agency.
Kownacki was accompanied on that trip, according to the report, by “Mateusz Piskorski, the founder of a Polish think tank, the European Centre for Geopolitical Analysis (ECGA) who is now in detention in Poland, facing charges of spying for Moscow.”
In September 2002, Rumsfeld received a now-declassified intelligence
report
stating that, “We don’t know with any precision how much we don’t know” about the “status of WMD programs” in Iraq.
But a recent International Monetary Fund
report
reveals the startling fact that China has now surpassed Japan and South Korea in square meters of housing per capita, having reached a level near – or, in some smaller cities, well above – the European average.
Our recent mid-year
report
found that 1,462 Afghan civilians were killed in the first half of this year, the highest number since the UN started documenting deaths and injuries of civilians in 2007.
In many countries, both developed and developing, men and women are at or near parity when it comes to education and health, according to the report, which covers 142 countries and 94% of the world’s population.
A recent study by the Credit Suisse Research Institute (CSRI) of 3,000 companies in diverse sectors and countries, however, yields a more depressing conclusion: women occupy only about 13% of top management positions (CEOs and people who
report
directly to them), on average, with even the highest rate, in North America, amounting to only 15%.
Companies with more women in top management and board positions better reflect the profiles of their customers and employees, benefit from more diverse views when solving problems, rank higher on indicators of organizational cooperation and health, and
report
higher profitability and returns on equity.
And a recent
report
by the Natural Resources Defense Council, Oil Change International, and the World Wide Fund for Nature revealed that from 2007 to 2014, governments channeled more than $73 billion – or over $9 billion per year – of public money toward coal projects.
Countering narco-gang violence includes working with Mexican telecommunications mogul Carlos Slim to develop tools that allow ordinary citizens to
report
violence anonymously by text message and enable police to map the results.
It is an apt metaphor for climate-change research, and one worth bearing in mind with the publication of the latest
report
of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
The IPCC’s fifth report, the product of several years of work by hundreds of climate scientists around the world, reviews our established understanding of climate change and explains more recent findings.
The media understandably tend to focus on the latter – like the much higher sea-level rise predictions compared to the previous IPCC
report
of 2007.
When the first IPCC
report
was published in 1990, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere had reached 354 parts per million (up from the preindustrial baseline of 280 ppm).
(with a minor exception in the fourth report, which gave a range of 2.0-4.5ºC).
A key conclusion of the new IPCC
report
is that sea-level rise has accelerated.
The latest IPCC
report
describes our current predicament with disturbing clarity: global temperatures are climbing, mountain glaciers and polar ice caps are melting, sea levels are rising, and extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and more severe.
Indeed, the extent of the task is reflected in a new McKinsey Global Institute report, “From Poverty to Empowerment,” which uses an innovative analytical framework, the “empowerment line,” to estimate the cost to the average citizen of fulfilling eight basic needs: food, energy, housing, potable water, sanitation, health care, education, and social security.
As my colleagues and I put it in our book-length
report
Nuclear Weapons: The State of Play 2015, launched in Geneva, Vienna, and Washington in March: “On the evidence of the size of their weapons arsenals, fissile material stocks, force modernization plans, stated doctrine and known deployment practices, all nine nuclear-armed states foresee indefinite retention of nuclear weapons and a continuing role for them in their security policies.”
After exposure to extreme stress, some victims
report
difficulties remembering things in everyday life.
Indeed, a
report
that Cyprus might sell a small fraction – some €400 million ($520 million) – of its gold reserves triggered a 13% fall in gold prices in April.
In line with this bold, long-term approach, a new report, China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative High-Income Society, proposes reforms that my country needs to develop a mature, well-functioning market economy by 2030.
The
report
is the result of a longstanding China-World Bank partnership.
According to the UN
report
World Economic Situation and Prospects 2016, their growth averaged only 3.8% in 2015 – the lowest rate since the global financial crisis in 2009 and matched in this century only by the recessionary year of 2001.
Indeed, the UN
report
lists 29 economies that are likely to be badly affected by China’s slowdown.
Journalists with long experience of war zones
report
being more worried about their safety in Mexico border than when they were in Bosnia, Afghanistan, or Iraq, though much of the violence is internecine.
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