Reward
in sentence
674 examples of Reward in a sentence
This can only be done by introducing legal mechanisms to
reward
those who protect the environment, while making polluters pay, and by helping to unify the environmental watchdogs scattered across different sectors.
They generously
reward
the lapdog press, while castigating genuine watchdog journalism – or any media outlet that refuses to toe the official line.
If Tunisia’s Zine El Abidine Ben Ali or Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak were hoping for political popularity as a
reward
for economic gains, they must have been sorely disappointed.
They ply their targets with plausible-sounding arguments, talking points, and suggestions that campaign or “super-PAC” contributions will find their way to politicians whose policies
reward
discrete, organized interests, even if they are very bad for America’s amorphous and unorganized consumers.
Doing so would not only enable us to
reward
governments that are fostering progress; it would also keep laggard governments accountable for their weak performance and, one hopes, motivate them to redouble their efforts.
By adopting this policy, Bush is walking a fine line between Arab pressure to support the emergence of a Palestinian state and his own commitment to fight terrorism and not
reward
suicide bombers.
Good public policy in such an environment needs to ensure that monopolists in one generation do not retard innovation in the next generation, and that monopoly profits from the provision of essential services are not too large (although they need to be large enough to
reward
past investments).
The political economy of capital markets today does not
reward
those who resist a regulatory race to the bottom.
To
reward
their courage with betrayal mocks everything that the West believes about itself.
Finally, the argument for a joint budget to
reward
domestic economic reforms assumes that such reforms create large-scale financial burdens in the short term.
On the contrary, it demands a fundamental rethink of business models that facilitate and even
reward
hate speech.
As an American recipient of a kidney who was once desperate enough to consider doing that myself (fortunately, a friend ended up donating to me), I agree wholeheartedly that we should offer well-informed individuals a
reward
if they are willing to save a stranger’s life.
The narrowing of national autonomy in the formulation of development strategy is a cost for which developing countries are unlikely to receive an adequate
reward.
Moreover, the US should
reward
critical concessions by North Korea – for example, permission to conduct intrusive inspections of its entire nuclear program by international inspectors – even before the completion of CVID.
For example, Wade at one point abolished Senegal’s senate, only to reinstate it after realizing that it could be put to use as a place to
reward
political allies.
The Nobel Prize is designed to
reward
those who do not play tricks for attention, and who, in their sincere pursuit of the truth, might otherwise be slighted.
Its selection to lead the OSCE is seen as a
reward
for President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s policy of engagement with the West.
By being less concerned with preventing default, we can make risk and
reward
more congruent with each other.
They are, in neurobiological terms, things that stimulate our
reward
system.
It makes evolutionary sense to
reward
such feelings.
Given the usefulness of accurately assessing the consequences of our actions, our
reward
system has evolved so that we derive joy from making successful predictions.
Since then, a great deal of data on the brain’s
reward
system has accumulated to explain this rewiring more concretely.
As with these other
reward
triggers, after the dopamine burst wears off, the consumer feels a letdown – irritable, anxious, and longing for the next fix.
Moreover, some men (and women) have a “dopamine hole” – their brains’
reward
systems are less efficient – making them more likely to become addicted to more extreme porn more easily.
An investment in local science is therefore a direct infusion into a community’s growth potential, one that eventually will
reward
investors with new breakthroughs.
Second, such firms are more likely to
reward
their CEOs for “luck.”
Irresponsible forest management, enhanced by poor governmental regulation and enforcement, and markets that
reward
illegal logging, are conspiring to denude the world’s most valuable and threatened forests.
He might well expect some political
reward
for doing so.
Much evidence, meanwhile, suggests that such flows present risk without reward: they lead to increased instability, not increased growth.
They could close Japan’s salary gender gap – wider than in any OECD country except South Korea – in part by establishing rules that
reward
performance rather than seniority.
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