Transformation
in sentence
1295 examples of Transformation in a sentence
And, while scholars have begun to talk about building an Asia-Pacific community that can match the Atlantic community’s extensive network of relationships, there has been no clear signal from the US government about America’s role in this
transformation.
This
transformation
has become a virtuous circle where initial growth has spiraled into greater growth, leading to more growth.
South Asia is at a critical stage in its historical transformation, when deepening economic disparities could stifle growth itself.
The next ten years could witness a dramatic
transformation
of education in India.
If we are witnessing this kind of transformation, then piecemeal reformers who try to address specific grievances about immigration, trade, or income inequality will lose out to radical politicians who challenge the entire system.
Moreover, in order to drive Europe’s
transformation
into a hub of responsible innovation and ethically sound production, policymakers must ensure that higher-education institutions equip students with cutting-edge knowledge and high-level flexible skills grounded in shared values.
But if current projections hold true, several countries will accomplish a similar
transformation
a decade faster.
In other words, South Korea will undergo in less than three decades a
transformation
that will have taken France nearly 175 years.
In this progressive
transformation
of the international system, German and European foreign policy will play an active role.
Still, I am convinced that the costs of the
transformation
are not simply to be dismissed.
In the long run, the answer undoubtedly lies in the
transformation
of the Mexican left, and partly also of the Mexican right.
Though they had to be increasingly aware of their country’s growing impact on the global economy, they had no strategy to ensure that China’s neighbors gained from its economic
transformation.
The persistence of the Zimbabwean crisis profoundly damages South Africa’s claim to leadership of efforts at African
transformation
via organizations such as NEPAD, which is largely dependent on Western aid.
Schooled in economics, politics, and law, rather than engineering, they will seek to accelerate China’s rise and transformation, viewing caution as paralysis.
Whether it does will depend to a large degree on how the West responds now, because what is at stake is not just the ousting of tyrants, but also the profound
transformation
and modernization of entire societies and economies.
The efforts involved in this great
transformation
must come from within these societies, and this in all likelihood is asking too much.
Eastern Europe’s
transformation
after 1989 took a lot longer and was much more costly than originally envisaged.
There were many people who lost out during this transformation, and the democratic revolution’s organizers were not necessarily those who could push through the democratic and economic development.
Germany’s demographic
transformation
will have significant implications for the country’s public finances, and especially for its social-insurance system.
With manufacturing’s share of employment rising from the low single digits in the 1950’s to a high of 28% in 1989 (it has since fallen by ten percentage points), South Korea underwent in three decades a
transformation
that took a century or longer in the early industrializers.
MOSCOW – In 1811, assessing the possibility – or, rather, the impossibility – of Russia ever undergoing a Western-style transformation, the diplomat and counter-Enlightenment philosopher Joseph de Maistre famously wrote, “Every nation has the government it deserves.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin is probably more than pleased with the country’s
transformation.
Russia's
transformation
into an economic magnet for the CIS will be the major force of renewed Russian strategic influence.
But that growth, based mainly on commodity exports and extractive industries, has demonstrated a limited capacity to drive socioeconomic transformation, not least because most of its benefits have accrued to a small share of the population.
But democracy is not the only instrument for a
transformation
that addresses the roots of terrorism.
Such a basic law would not automatically mean
transformation
of today’s union into the federal supra-state feared by Eurosceptics.
Economists enamored of the neo-liberal Washington Consensus may have written it off, but successful economies have always relied on government policies that promote growth by accelerating structural
transformation.
This historic
transformation
will continue to gain momentum as it expands in both scale and scope.
In doing so, they block the small and emerging players that are so vital to upgrading and
transformation.
But multilateralism is undergoing a
transformation
of its own, driven by doubts about the legitimacy of existing structures.
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