Resilience
in sentence
740 examples of Resilience in a sentence
If firewalls are strong, or redundancy and
resilience
allow quick recovery, or the prospect of a self-enforcing response (“an electric fence”) seems possible, an attack becomes less attractive.
Some of the most important responses must be national and unilateral, focused on hygiene, redundancy, and
resilience.
As a result, many Western companies recognize that introducing more diversity into the decision-making process at most levels will boost their
resilience
and agility.
Yet they render invaluable services, in terms of preservation of agro- and biodiversity, local communities’
resilience
to price shocks or weather-related events, and environmental conservation.
Thus, one should pay tribute to the
resilience
of Dutch Muslims as they resist the provocations of the right-wing politician Geert Wilders, who is bent on releasing a film that can only inflame public prejudice against Islam.
Loosening that constraint on output growth would improve the European economy's resilience, encourage risk-taking, and promote dynamism.
The CCP, they insist, has proved its
resilience
since the Tiananmen crisis in 1989 and the collapse of Soviet communism in 1991.
But Lebanon also shows signs of
resilience.
Lebanon’s
resilience
owes much to the memory of its painful civil war (1975-1990).
In particular, the global powers are underestimating Iran’s resilience, and Iran is overestimating the ability of the US, in an election year, to curb possible Israeli military adventurism.
The lesson is also apparent in the economic history of the twentieth century, when – especially in the decades following the Great Depression – most of today’s advanced industrialized countries underwent a sustained process of institutional deepening that broadened the base and strengthened the
resilience
of their economies.
But the strengthening of institutions in areas that promote social inclusion is also a form of structural reform, in this case aimed at maximizing the contribution of growth to broad living standards and strengthening its
resilience.
The
resilience
of private consumption in the US, the key to the growth gap, is not surprising, given that American households have reduced their debt burden considerably from the peak of more than 90% of GDP reached just before the crisis.
This key difference between the US and (continental) Europe explains the
resilience
of the US economy to the collapse of its credit boom.
It suggests support for agriculture and agribusiness development and linking them with other sectors, as well as measures to boost
resilience
to price shocks.
Nowhere else are there markets of such depth, breadth, and
resilience.
Although these fixes helped to prevent the eurozone from collapsing, they were not enough to ensure the monetary union’s long-term
resilience
– a failing that has left the eurozone vulnerable to Italy’s brewing crisis.
Moreover, the data on personal saving suggest somewhat fewer vulnerabilities and more
resilience
in the household sector.
Such
resilience
will be tested over the longer run, though, owing to the fiscal and external imbalances, which were unaffected by the data revision.
When an SME builds up its own climate resilience, it can have cascading effects in the community around it.
The role of microfinance in boosting SMEs’ climate-change
resilience
needs to be more fully defined.
According to a review by the OECD, 43% of microfinance activities in Bangladesh in 2010 had strengthened the
resilience
of communities.
These projects include lending programs for weather-resistant housing and drought- and salt-tolerant seeds, and they enhanced climate-change
resilience.
To allay concerns about money being poorly spent, microfinance institutions should reward SME owners who use loans to finance climate-change
resilience
and renewable-energy projects.
This mobile-enabled information leads to better decision-making, saving the farmers money and boosting their
resilience
to extreme-weather patterns and droughts.
But the sheer diversity, resilience, and transmissibility of deadly diseases have also highlighted, in the starkest of terms, just how difficult containment and prevention can be.
Likewise, all EU members would gain from the increased
resilience
afforded by greater investment in energy transmission.
Greater flexibility might not stimulate short-term growth, but it would improve
resilience
to future negative shocks, whether they originate at home or abroad.
Much is made of Asia’s Teflon-like
resilience
in an otherwise tough post-crisis climate.
Because education not only imparts life skills, but also promotes
resilience
and self-reliance, and helps address the psychological and social needs of children impacted by conflict, it is a basic need for refugees.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Economic
Climate
Global
Which
Countries
Build
Shocks
Economy
Financial
Change
Crisis
Strengthen
Growth
Would
Systems
Should
About
Economies
Against