Wider
in sentence
942 examples of Wider in a sentence
In this scenario, the loser would undoubtedly be the
wider
West, meaning not just Europe but countries like India, which will remain committed to liberal democracy, economic openness, and the values underpinning that miraculous quarter-century after the Cold War.
A massive gap between the elites and everyone else ensured that the top echelons of literature, business, and politics were managed by the wealthy few, and that the talents that would emerge a generation later, in the wake of
wider
state-funded education, were suppressed.
Russia has had more than two decades to reshape itself into a country that would benefit its people, Europe, and the
wider
world.
Lendico, and RainFin have proved popular, and could re-energize the microfinance community and provide
wider
access to loans for SMEs in developing countries.
The third false lesson is that if we could only maintain confidence in the financial system (and by extension the
wider
economic system), the system itself could be trusted to survive and prosper.
Far more damaging is the simple fact that when a closed group monopolizes much of society's power and wealth, initiative and enterprise are stifled in the
wider
population.
What are needed are intermediary organizations that will grant a measure of control to foreigners, allow diversification across a
wider
range of US-located assets, and yet still appear 100% American to US politicians.
Eighth, US involvement in Syria will breathe new life into efforts to press for a
wider
war between the US and Iran.
With the funding gap growing wider, fulfilling these pledges is crucial.
Nevertheless, because female genital mutilation is tied to a
wider
set of traditional practices involving the control of girls’ bodies and minds, and because these traditions have a powerful hold on some Africans, ultimately the practice can be halted only through concerted efforts by Africans themselves.
Policymakers must weigh the risks of volatility, exchange-rate pressures, and vulnerability to sudden reversals in capital flows against the benefits of
wider
access to credit and enhanced competition.
Rather, the desire to protect US “credibility” has become the last refuge of those seeking yet another war in the
wider
Middle East.
He described it as a means for creating a “fusion of interests…that will be the leavening from which may grow a
wider
and deeper community between countries long opposed to one another by bloody conflicts.”
There was even talk of the G20 intervening in a
wider
range of areas, potentially even eclipsing the United Nations Security Council.
A reinvigorated accession process would contribute to the EU’s consolidation, both territorially and politically, while strengthening its role in its
wider
neighborhood – the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and around the Black Sea.
Whatever the rights and wrongs of Plummer’s conviction and sentence, however, the case illuminates an issue with much
wider
ramifications.
The conflict is “armed theater,” in which the antagonists are simultaneously locked in struggle with each other and sending messages to
wider
audiences, particularly the Iraqi people.
The jihadists appear to want a Taliban-style Iraq that could serve as a bastion for the
wider
global Islamist insurgency.
To get more revenue requires casting the net much
wider.
Pragmatists acknowledge that the ratification crisis set in train by the Irish rejection of the Lisbon Treaty has grown into a
wider
European problem.
So the inter-linkage between the ratification crises in Ireland and the Czech Republic is now explicit and threatens to spill over into the
wider
EU arena in 2009.
The policy change aimed at rectifying this grim reality in Serbia came when the Ministry agreed to apply country wide a pilot project that has, since 2003, established a range of community-based support services to enable persons with intellectual disabilities to leave the institutions where they were confined and begin living lives in the
wider
world.
The core idea was simple: stop arguing for a “right to intervene,” which inevitably generates a backlash, and talk instead about “responsibility” – that of every state to protect its own citizens from atrocities, but also that of the
wider
international community to act if a state is unable or unwilling to do so.
Moderate Arab governments understand full well the issue at stake in this war: it is about regional hegemony in the case of Syria with Lebanon and Palestine and, on a
wider
level, Iran’s hegemonic claim to the entire Middle East.
Through improved seed stocks and more efficient water management, we can have crops that require less water, grow at higher density, and thrive in
wider
temperature ranges.
Perhaps these regional bargains will prove to be a step toward
wider
free trade.
But the combination of the first serious unrest in Tibet in almost 20 years and the
wider
groundswell of criticism being directed at China ahead of the Beijing Olympics has sent businesses and investors scrambling to assess what it means for them, particularly in terms of reputational and ethical concerns.
The EU has led the discussion within its own structures and taken it to
wider
international fora.
While such efforts certainly point in the right direction, the research-friendliness and innovativeness of the
wider
societal environment – particularly practices of informal learning and opportunities to follow one’s curiosity – also matter.
Voluntary self-restraint, a voluntary sharing of our own rights and privileges with a
wider
collective, is paramount here.
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