Societies
in sentence
2138 examples of Societies in a sentence
The movie experience was almost like getting sucked into a novel possibly a modern day Camus perhaps.The story also perhaps was focusing on the lack of a social support structure in modern
societies.
The Obsolete Man makes quite an obvious comment on the role of government and certain ways in which powers can be abused or
societies
can go astray.
Looking back having this work done to help future generations how was hard and tough to change
societies
and rules created by human beings who use the name of God in vain.
Western
societies
have come a long way in their tolerance and understanding of gay people.
With Hollywood's usual sugar-coated approach to everything, including prison life, it's nice to see how independent filmmakers in some of the most impoverished
societies
of the world handle the subject.
"I'm sick of Symmetry" a character says in this film, and here we have one of the last works of Luis Bunuel's surrealistic fantasies that brings a story after another with a never ending that mocks the ignorance in which
societies
live in; It's just amazing how Bunuel exposures the conventionalism to which we are so accustomed and makes of any place a more decadent and irrational angle of the world.
Both had taken over stricken
societies
with visions of a new day with rewards for the faithful brutal remorseless doom for those who challenged them.
One group, comprising students, entrepreneurs, and researchers, seeks solutions that are local, original, and tailored to the needs of their
societies.
A better understanding of the various issues and possible remedies could enable science to flourish again in the Muslim world, with far-reaching benefits for its economies and
societies.
Naturally, all existing
societies
fall somewhere between these two extremes, with relatively egalitarian countries like Denmark at around 0.25, and less egalitarian countries like the US and Turkey closer to 0.4.
Vohs and her colleagues suggest that as
societies
began to use money, the necessity of relying on family and friends diminished, and people were able to become more self-sufficient.
Social and political mobility become extremely limited, and
societies
turn from production to consumption.
The key will be to smooth out free trade’s negative impacts and prepare
societies
better for increasing economic openness.
In rich
societies
over the last three decades, mean incomes have been rising steadily, but typical incomes have been stagnating or even falling.
In much of the world, aging
societies
and declining birth rates mean that the days of abundant labor are coming to an end.
But we know one thing: the productivity paradox is real, and it is contributing to rising inequality in many
societies.
Global leaders – whether policymakers or intellectuals – bear a responsibility to prepare their
societies
for impending global shifts.
Following the massacre at the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris last month, world leaders dashed to the scene, locked arms, and marched in support of freedom of expression as a bedrock principle of civilized
societies.
And in the Middle East, the Islamic State (ISIS) virulently rejects modernity – and targets
societies
that embrace it.
The world is a very unequal place, and inequality within
societies
has widened considerably in recent decades.
Venezuela also boasted one of the region’s most vibrant civil societies, with some of its freest and most vigorous media.
A recent study published in Damascus by the Center of Islamic Studies pointed out that conservatives make up about 80% of the population of the Middle East’s Islamic
societies.
What Money Can BuyCHICAGO – In an interesting recent book, What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of the Market, the Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel points to the range of things that money can buy in modern
societies
and gently tries to stoke our outrage at the market’s growing dominance.
Japan’s leaders must recognize that the mindlessness with which they still treat the sensitivities of
societies
that suffered from Japanese imperialism in the twentieth century is as morally deaf as it is strategically damaging.
The US and Indian examples suggest that, in democratic societies, groups that promote social discrimination grow politically weaker over time.
In
societies
where women are treated like second-class citizens, ISIS has an easier time recruiting women with its quasi-female empowerment propaganda, like one image that shows a woman clad in a burqa with the words “Covered girl...because I’m worth it.”
The risks – to commerce, societies, and the environment – are pervasive.
With smart choices, investments over the next few decades to reduce risk can contribute to vibrant societies, robust economies, and healthy environments.
It all depends on a value judgment – one of the many value judgments
societies
must make with respect to modern medicine.
Just like in the developed countries of the West, migrants in the Middle East can offer untold contributions to their host
societies.
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