Transition
in sentence
2200 examples of Transition in a sentence
In reality, this
transition
has impeded Pakistan’s evolution into a modern, functioning state underpinned by a coherent national identity.
Given concerns about security and the fate of the democratic transition, economic issues were essentially put on hold in both elections.
This
transition
is already occurring in some rich countries, but will take longer in places like Kazakhstan.
Until the
transition
is complete, we depend on each other: no one can succeed alone.
Such transfers of wealth might be justified as a one-time historic bargain, in which young and old share the burden of
transition.
This encouraging sign caps a year of remarkable progress and
transition
in the Somali peace process.
In September 2011, the Somali authorities adopted a “Roadmap for ending the transition,” which commits the Transitional Federal Government to a series of concrete tasks and fixed benchmarks to be accomplished by the end of August 2012.
Good Policies for Great CountriesNEW YORK – We are in a protracted period of international transition, one that began more than two decades ago with the Cold War’s end.
Their willingness to do so will determine when and how this period of global
transition
ends and what succeeds it.
To be sure, the challenge ahead is as broad as it is complex; but it is becoming increasingly clear that making the
transition
to a low-carbon economy will bring considerable economic benefits.
Completing the
transition
to a low-carbon future is perhaps the preeminent challenge of our time, and we won’t succeed without expanding renewable-energy production.
But the
transition
from a “goal” to a “target,” combined with steep declines in AIDS-related deaths, has lulled us into a false sense of accomplishment.
Multinational companies were a driving force in Eastern Europe’s postcommunist transition, bringing new skills, technology, training, and better working conditions.
There are three parts to this
transition.
Even as the rich countries urged developing countries to make quick adjustments, they claimed that they needed a decade to make the
transition
to a quota-free textile regime.
Western leaders must help to prevent such an outcome by issuing a clear and principled response to developments in Egypt, one that urges a rapid
transition
to democratic rule with full political rights for the Brotherhood.
Argentina’s trial of the generals was a successful ritual in the painstaking
transition
from military junta to democracy, but the experience ended with weeping self-doubt.
Thus, the central European Union institutions, along with the International Monetary Fund, have an important role to play in stabilization and the
transition
to sustainable growth.
Navigating such a structural
transition
without causing a sharp decline in economic growth would be difficult for any country.
For years, China’s government sought to broaden equity ownership, thereby providing more Chinese citizens with a stake in a successful
transition
to a market economy.
But that time is not now; and, given the country’s tricky ongoing structural transition, it probably will not come anytime soon.
In short, the Arab world’s
transition
countries are much more vulnerable today than they were at the height of the protests in 2011.
In 2011, the G-8 Deauville Partnership – which brought the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) to the region – pledged that the international financial institutions (IFIs) would provide $38 billion to the
transition
countries over three years.
But that promise was based more on existing IFI pipelines than on
transition
countries’ emerging needs.
And, from the
transition
countries’ perspective, bilateral support from the G-8 and the European Union has been disappointing.
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries – especially Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Kuwait – have contributed roughly $28 billion to the
transition
countries.
While these resources have helped to finance budget shortfalls, stabilize reserves, and calm nervous markets, they have not been sufficiently leveraged to improve the policy framework, strengthen implementation of public investment projects, or, more generally, put the
transition
countries on an inclusive and sustainable growth path.
Europe has one – and only one – chance to manage this historic
transition.
Because democratic institutions in Romania have frittered away much of their standing during the almost ten years of postcommunist transition, many politicians tend either to embrace the views of the generals, or, at least, avoid going publicly against them.
Francis was no doubt informed by the
transition
from military dictatorship to democracy in his native Argentina.
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