Tackling
in sentence
366 examples of Tackling in a sentence
So I am convinced that we should raise the profile of biodiversity in
tackling
climate change and food insecurity, and that we need more high-level attention to this subject.
But NATO countries have only just begun to consider which policies to pursue in
tackling
global challenges, which capabilities are needed to achieve their security goals, and how to collaborate with non-Western institutions and countries.
China attaches great importance to
tackling
climate change.
The real challenge of global warming, therefore, lies in
tackling
its impact on the Third World.
Tackling
these challenges requires a clear understanding of how economic opportunities can be broadened to ensure faster poverty reduction, promote human development, and stimulate gender-inclusive growth.
While these developments should no doubt be celebrated, governments, companies, and individuals around the world are
tackling
the biggest problem that comes with increased life expectancy: growing costs.
Tackling
the two biggest killers of children worldwide may seem daunting, but we have all the knowledge we need to mount an effective response.
If they work together, more progress can be made in
tackling
the world's problems than if they see each global flashpoint as an opportunity to seek advantage at the other's expense.
It is time for Europe to catch up, first by establishing its own special prosecutor to investigate attacks on recent elections, but also by
tackling
other crimes that arise from the abuse of data.
Just as US leadership once galvanized international support for
tackling
issues such as HIV/AIDS, the current US approach could give momentum to isolationist and anti-feminist forces around the world.
Tackling
Science’s Gender-Parity ProblemLONDON – Two years ago, the United Nations designated February 11 the International Day of Women and Girls in Science.
But there is more to the story: the BRICS are just as important to
tackling
AMR as
tackling
AMR is to the BRICS.
The BRICS today, like in 2001, have a vital role to play in
tackling
the most pressing international challenges.
The only real option for
tackling
the refugee crisis is to address the causes of people’s displacement, including terrorism, hunger, disease, oppression, inadequate infrastructure, scarce vital resources, a lack of jobs and economic prospects, and falling standards of living.
That requires expanding markets in developing countries, which means
tackling
income inequality and getting income into the right hands – an enormous organizational challenge that is off the radar because economists focus exclusively on savings and supply-side issues.
Longer-run challenges include increasing oil production and
tackling
Iraq's huge outstanding debt.
If the international community is serious about alleviating poverty and achieving development goals,
tackling
the diseases so directly associated with economic misery should be a fundamental objective.
Doing so would allow the IPCC to get on with its work – and enable governments around the world to focus on the challenges of climate change and the urgency of
tackling
them.
To avoid that outcome, in May the Review on AMR that I lead published its strategy for
tackling
such infections, laying out proposals to ensure the development of the necessary new antibiotics, and to use existing antibiotics more efficiently in humans and agriculture.
When it comes to
tackling
climate change, the United States has produced no federal mandate explicitly requiring or even promoting emissions-reductions targets.
Achieving the SDGs – and, thus,
tackling
the climate crisis – will require us to stand up to the vested political, business, and economic interests that seek to maintain our current unequal order.
Tackling
the world’s environmental and ecological problems, and improving the lot of those who have been left behind, will require public action, such as that which I oversaw in my roles at the World Bank, the United Nations, and the British government.
Earth Hour teaches us that
tackling
global warming is easy.
Tackling
climate change by turning off the lights and eating dinner by candlelight smacks of the “let them eat cake” approach to the world’s problems that appeals only to well-electrified, comfortable elites.
Our success in
tackling
the enormous challenges we face will depend not only on our willingness to work actively and cooperatively to advance the common good, but also on our ability to foster the attributes needed to do so.
The seriousness of China on this issue, and now India, the enthusiasm of Brazil and others in the emerging markets to participate in
tackling
climate change: all of this offers a huge opportunity that should be grasped.
But governments, medical associations, and hospitals must also commit to
tackling
the antibiotic crisis together.
As Secretary-General, Ban has lived up to his self-styled vision of being the consummate diplomat, and has made some important gains in
tackling
the UN's bureaucratic bloat as well as dealing with the Middle East.
We need a smarter approach to
tackling
climate change.
Tackling
the education challenge needs to start from two principles embedded in the goal.
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