Stems
in sentence
356 examples of Stems in a sentence
In South Korea, one of the most painful legacies of the Japanese colonial period
stems
from the Korean elite’s widespread collaboration at the time.
It now seems clear to almost everyone that one key challenge facing the eurozone
stems
from the fact that it is a monetary union without being an economic union, an arrangement that has no counterpart anywhere.
That debate
stems
from the fact that capitalism, or the market economy, cannot simply go on forever, driven by an internal momentum or dynamic.
It
stems
from a pattern of postponed or partial structural reforms, of privatizations that benefit elites but hurt consumers.
Others suggest that Putin’s aloofness
stems
from Kremlin infighting.
In Europe, that difference
stems
from two revolutions, one peaceful and wealth-enhancing (1688 in England), and the other violent and destructive (1789 in France).
The second complication
stems
from the structural imbalance between the banking sector (or the debt market) and the stock market.
The risk
stems
not from the conduct of the South Koreans or the Taiwanese, but from the democratic choices that they make, which may offend two of Asia’s last dictatorships.
The second mutation
stems
from excessive shareholder dominance, which has been on the rise for more than three decades.
The US-China trade imbalance
stems
from structural flaws.
When a country engages in the world, its authority
stems
from its willingness and ability to take “personal” risks.
One important lesson
stems
from the rationale for war.
Of course, some of the pessimism arises from the weakness of Europe, which has agreed only that the European Central Bank be lender of last resort; and some
stems
from recognition of the limits of quantitative easing.
Another challenge
stems
from the global nature of climate change.
Much (though not all) of the global environmental crisis
stems
from the world’s fossil-fuel-based energy system.
Human-induced climate change
stems
from two principal sources of emissions of greenhouse gases (mainly carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide): fossil-fuel use for energy and agriculture (including deforestation to create new farmland and pastureland).
This has given rise to a third problem in addressing climate change, which
stems
from a combination of the economic implications of the issue and the uncertainty that surrounds it.
The governance challenge
stems
from the fact that cyberspace is a combination of virtual properties, which defy geographical boundaries, and physical infrastructure, which fall under sovereign jurisdictions.
America’s interest in maintaining the liberal world order
stems
from its role as what political scientists call a “responsible fiduciary” and “privilege taker” in that system.
A second problem
stems
from China’s incomplete transition on the world stage.
The upside risk to US inflation
stems
from that translation – the value of the dollar.
Some of the unease about ECT
stems
from psychiatry’s dark past, when patients in many countries had fewer legal rights than prisoners.
But its global influence
stems
in no small part from the strategic clout that EU membership provides.
The crisis in morale among today’s medical scientists
stems
not from money problems, nor from the stage of development of their fields, nor from the level of research that is being conducted, but from these scientists’ failure to form themselves into proper, humane communities.
So is employing young men, educating young women, and addressing values of liberty and justice, which means ameliorating the sense of indignity in the region that
stems
from issues like the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Because China’s leaders are not popularly elected, their legitimacy
stems
largely from two sources – their connection to the Chinese revolution and their ability to deliver national security and economic growth.
Not all of the opposition to Abe’s agenda, however,
stems
from substantive objections.
The significance of what was accomplished
stems
in part from Bin Laden’s symbolic importance.
One potential positive development here
stems
from the political changes that we are seeing in many parts of the Middle East.
We face a potential crisis, therefore, that
stems
from our fundamental ignorance about the biosphere, for it is impossible to be proactive about species of pathogens whose existence has not been documented.
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