Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

71 Sentences With "evenhandedness"

How to use evenhandedness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "evenhandedness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "evenhandedness". Mastering all the usages of "evenhandedness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Precedent plays an important role in promoting stability and evenhandedness.
The scrupulous evenhandedness of Perel's approach is eminently reasonable in theory.
As a result, they came ready to apologize and demonstrate their evenhandedness.
"Precedent plays an important role in promoting stability and evenhandedness," Roberts said.
"Precedent plays an important role in promoting stability and evenhandedness," he said then.
One of his last local acts showed his evenhandedness in these partisan times.
Even there the penchant for evenhandedness, levelling mockery at both candidates, seems misguided.
The evenhandedness so far appears to have worked at avoiding major intra-party rifts.
Under the Trump administration, the United States has utterly abandoned any pretext of evenhandedness.
"Hostiles" is committed to evenhandedness and so introduces some bad white men into the mix.
But by following such a biased policy, Europe risks forfeiting the evenhandedness necessary for effective mediation.
Yet the starkly different strategies of the candidates are straining the industry's bedrock notions of evenhandedness.
But it does mean citizens have a platform to make a case for evenhandedness and shared sacrifice.
The conflation of race and victimhood still permeates society, even though the commission sought a contentious evenhandedness.
Can we still put fairness, evenhandedness and historical precedent ahead of the partisan passions of the day?
Such an unjustifiably short prison term calls into question the evenhandedness and impartiality of our system of justice.
Judges are free to exercise discretion, but algorithms bring a measure of consistency and evenhandedness to the process.
Palestinians have been deeply skeptical of Mr. Trump's attempts at evenhandedness given how Israeli-centric his team is.
Ms. Kelly, with her usual poise and professionalism, won for her evenhandedness, good nature and elegant coolness under fire.
Marantz knows that evenhandedness is a professional principle; but even more fundamental, he says, is the need for honesty.
They get the same focus, because I'm interested in all of them, and I want to give them an evenhandedness.
After all, the rule of law embodies evenhandedness, and 'what is sauce for the goose is normally sauce for the gander.
Legal observers say her distinguishing trait is the evenhandedness of her rulings, unswayed by the histrionics of defense lawyers, prosecutors or defendants themselves.
He has also emphasized the importance of "promoting stability and evenhandedness" of the Supreme Court, as he put it in his Senate confirmation hearing.
Many in Riyadh will likely be shocked by the evenhandedness of the U.S. approach, especially as Washington does not even have diplomatic relations with Tehran.
A special negotiator appointed by President Trump, Jason Greenblatt, visited Israeli and Palestinian leaders this week as part of an undertaking to maintain diplomatic evenhandedness.
But De Niro has approached the role of Bernie Madoff with an evenhandedness, even a minimalism, that places his performance among the greats of his career.
In the early 1950s, journalists were also faced with how to cover a manipulative demagogue — Senator Joe McCarthy — and traditional evenhandedness wasn't serving the public interest.
But it's also interesting as a window into how the political press works, and why it does or doesn't follow rules of evenhandedness in different circumstances.
" The tweet clashed with CNN's stated dedication to evenhandedness, which, as the Washington Post's Erik Wemple wrote, was both a matter of "journalistic principle" and a "business imperative.
We are here to determine whether Judge Kavanaugh has demonstrated the impartiality, the temperament, the evenhandedness that's needed to serve on this great high court of our land.
In the face of these unprecedented and incendiary declarations of war against the press, journalists and media pundits continued to preach the talismanic gospel of self-restraint and evenhandedness.
But Sunday, as afternoon was turning into evening and the 116th United States Open was hitting its stride, the country's national golf championship temporarily lost its sense of evenhandedness.
This mostly confirmed that Harrelson did not have much of a future as a major league manager, but it also demonstrated Rose's evenhandedness despite working for a license-holder.
The press must find a way to provide close scrutiny of the Trump administration, but without the appearance that it is "fighting hard" for anything other than accuracy and evenhandedness.
I'm talking about stories that take an ordinary person and watch her, through hours and years, inside and out, and strive, if not for objectivity, then at least for evenhandedness.
My plan, for all 185,000 voting precincts in America, is founded on: Principles: open dialogue, impartiality and evenhandedness toward the candidates for the presidential nomination, as required by the DNC Charter.
And while they did finally appear on Wednesday, the execs spent most of their time avoiding committing to or saying much of anything beyond their general apologies and commitments to evenhandedness.
While Truman's actions are best described as a civil rights approach, rather than a diversity initiative, his actions exemplify an esteemed organizational model: evenhandedness for the individual and soundness of the organization.
There was policy reporting in the newspapers, of course, but it didn't go as deep, and it was crippled by the faux-evenhandedness that is death to any serious conversation over solutions.
Trump has destroyed, then, an already hollowed-out notion of objective knowledge; the outbreak of sectarianism has uncovered the true diversity of experiences and viewpoints concealed by the deceptively bland posture of evenhandedness.
It is as though the country's white, Protestant elites especially needed the rhetorical ruses of fair-mindedness and evenhandedness to command assent in a diverse and fragmented society, and to conceal their own prejudices.
"I have selected a nominee who is widely recognized not only as one of America's sharpest legal minds, but someone who brings to his work a spirit of decency modesty, integrity, evenhandedness and excellence," Obama said.
Ghost stories, specifically, took a few decades to disappear from newspapers, fizzling out in the mid-20th century with the rise of a different standard of journalism: Objectivity and evenhandedness took the place of sensationalism and scandal.
It's not just the tender familiarity of the scene that stands out — it's the evenhandedness, the way the movie shows social media as a fact of life, neither the cause of nor a solution to Kayla's adolescent loneliness.
Over the past decade, that connection has been codified by Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at San Diego State University, who writes about those younger than herself with an air of pragmatic evenhandedness and an undercurrent of moral alarm.
This strike against Conroy is part of a larger struggle within society to re-define faith without its social implications and that means condemning those who call for equality, justice, and evenhandedness in the name of faith, as partisan.
"I've selected a nominee who is widely recognized not only as one of America's sharpest legal minds, but someone who brings to his work a spirit of decency, modesty, integrity, evenhandedness and excellence" Obama said Wednesday during a Rose Garden ceremony.
And his faux-evenhandedness has earned him a major platform from which to push bad-faith, misleading interpretations of the science, providing intellectually lazy excuses for America to keep kicking the can down the road while the planet slowly burns up.
Those who applaud Fallon's vanilla-flavored posture can point to a long history of evenhandedness on the part of "Tonight Show" hosts, where Johnny Carson and Jay Leno both studiously sought to dispense political humor across the spectrum in equal measure.
Walker spent the last decade as a Moscow correspondent, first for the British newspaper The Independent and then for The Guardian; his reporting has been distinguished by an evenhandedness and open-mindedness that have become sadly rare in coverage of Russia and Ukraine.
Gloria Steinem, the feminist leader and a Clinton supporter, said in an email that she had sensed a growing worry in recent weeks, fearing that Mr. Trump's candidacy was becoming "legitimized by 'media evenhandedness'" that had made his assorted scandals seem more banal.
JERUSALEM — President Trump's new envoy to the Middle East met on Tuesday with Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, striving in the administration's first diplomatic undertaking here to maintain a public evenhandedness amid the deep distrust between the Israelis and Palestinians.
We have watched, in shock, as our leaders have indulged and even recruited a new crop of writers who may have youth on their side, but lack the nuance, caution, evenhandedness, and sensitivity that has long defined the tenured chairs of thought leadership that define this noblest of pages.
Madison's worries about the potential for conflict when faith communities scramble for taxpayer dollars could well underlie the chief's careful path in cases like Trinity Lutheran: the constitution requires evenhandedness when funding secular goods, wherever they are found, but permits states to keep taxpayer dollars away from explicitly religious pursuits.
One bit, which serves to demonstrate the evenhandedness of the judge's ruling: Furman ruled in Ross's favor on the plaintiffs' charge that the decision to add the citizenship question violated plaintiffs' rights to equal protection under the constitution, because there was not sufficient evidence to show discriminatory intent on Ross's part.
None of this should come as a surprise following Mr. Trump's earlier unilateral decisions to move the American Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, to recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights and to declare the West Bank settlements legal under international law — all actions that reversed decades of American policy and renounced any semblance of evenhandedness.
Impartiality (also called evenhandedness or fair-mindedness) is a principle of justice holding that decisions should be based on objective criteria, rather than on the basis of bias, prejudice, or preferring the benefit to one person over another for improper reasons.
In the preface to the collection of Linghu's literary works, the ninth-century thinker Liu Yuxi described Linghu's time as military governor: > Linghu from the start regulated himself with purity and honesty. He treated > others with kindness and trust. He eliminated the doubts of the many with > evenhandedness. He eliminated the harsh enforcement of law with ritual and > deference.
According to Politico, Scully is known in the media for his "evenhandedness". He was the 2009 recipient of the Fitzwater Center for Communications Award, for exemplary journalism and public service, and in the same year was recognized by The Washingtonian as one of the capital's "50 Top Journalists". John Oliver has repeatedly referred to Scully as "The Most Patient Man on Television". Scully was inducted into the Pennsylvania Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2019.
Joseph Carens distinguishes three dimensions of citizenship in his book Culture, Citizenship, and Community. A Contextual Exploration of Justice as Evenhandedness; a legal, psychological and political dimension. The legal dimension refers to the formal rights and duties to the political community to which one belongs, the psychological dimension refers to one's identification with the political community to which one belongs, the political dimension refers to one's sense of the representational legitimacy of those who act authoritatively on behalf of and in the name of the political community.
There were personal tensions between several contestants during the series, and producers exacerbated these tensions by showing footage of this whenever possible during the brief highlights packages on the live shows. Arguments also regularly broke out between the Fame Academy teachers during the live showdowns. David and Carrie Grant frequently disagreed with Richard Park, although Robin Gibb maintained a neutral stance, and gained respect for his evenhandedness towards all the contestants throughout the series. Regular arguments also broke out between Richard Park and the presenter Patrick Kielty.
Begg co-authored a book released in March 2006 about his Guantanamo experiences, it was co-written with Victoria Brittain, a former associate foreign editor of The Guardian. It was published in Britain as Enemy Combatant: A British Muslim's Journey To Guantanamo and Back (), and in the US as Enemy Combatant: My Imprisonment at Guantanamo, Bagram, and Kandahar (). In the US, the foreword was written by David Ignatius of The Washington Post. The book received praise in Britain for Begg's "outstanding liberality of mind and evenhandedness toward his captors".
Goldstone also praised Israel for investigating claims of war crimes while faulting Hamas for its failure to launch any investigations of its own forces. Goldstone commended Israel for responding to his report by revising military procedures e.g. to discontinue the use of white phosphorus (including as a smokescreen) in or near civilian areas. Goldstone also expressed that he initially hoped the "inquiry into all aspects of the Gaza conflict would begin a new era of evenhandedness at the U.N. Human Rights Council, whose history of bias against Israel cannot be doubted".
Writing in the Los Angeles Times, novelist Francine Prose described Faderman's book as "full of facts and wonderful details that readers may not have encountered, things that are a pleasure to learn and that seem valuable to know."Francine Prose, "Women Without Men : Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth Century America, By Lillian Faderman", Los Angeles Times, June 9, 1991. In The Washington Post, Susan Brownmiller called the book "a remarkable social history" that "attains the depth and evenhandedness of a scholarly classic".Susan Brownmiller, "Women in Love", The Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
The poem's central character, Martín Fierro, is a gaucho, a free, poor, pampas-dweller, who is illegally drafted to serve at a border fort defending against Indian attacks. He eventually deserts, and becomes a gaucho matrero, basically the Argentine equivalent of a North American western outlaw. In his book of essays, Borges displays his typical concision, evenhandedness, and love of paradox, but he also places himself in the spectrum of views of Martín Fierro and, thus, effectively, gives a clue as to his (Borges's) relation to nationalist myth. Borges has nothing but praise for the aesthetic merit of Martín Fierro, but refuses to project that as indicating moral merit for its protagonist.
The book received praise in Britain for Begg’s "outstanding liberality of mind and evenhandedness toward his captors". Writing in The Guardian, Philippe Sands said: "The humour and warmth are striking", "it has affection ... It has humour ... It has insight ... And it has restraint: the flashes of anger .... are in exceptional contrast to the measured understatement of his own "relatively uneventful" treatment at Guantánamo". Sands concluded the book "should be required reading for those who created this dangerous mess, starting with Messrs Bush, Cheney, Gonzales and Rumsfeld". In The Independent, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown compared the book to the "Holocaust testimonies" of Primo levi and Rabbi Hugo Gryn, saying that Begg "writes with the same authenticity and conveys horror without hyperbole".
She recognized that "there are many dire and urgent troubles men face that should be addressed" but concluded of the documentary, "[It] only exacerbates that divide with its uncritical, lopsided presentation and inability to craft a compelling argument regarding a topic this controversial." John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter said, "Cassie Jaye's The Red Pill is clumsy and frustrating in many ways. But it demonstrates enough sincerity and openness to challenging ideas — letting representatives of this problematic movement make their case clearly and convincingly — that one wishes it were able to look at multiple sides of this debate at the same time." DeFore summarized the film as "an admirable attempt at evenhandedness whose journalistic and aesthetic failings dilute its arguments".
The NOC released a report on 9 October 1969, and it cited "racial politics" as the primary cause of the riots, but was reluctant to assign blame to the Malays. It also attributed the cause of the riots in part to both the Malayan Communist Party and secret societies: It however said that the "trouble turned out to be a communal clash between the Malays and the Chinese" rather than an instance of Communist insurgency. The report also denied rumours of lack of evenhandedness by the security forces in their handling of the crisis. Tunku Abdul Rahman, in a book released two weeks before the report, blamed the opposition parties for the violence, as well as the influence of the Communists, and thought that the incidents were sparked off by Chinese Communist youths.
Elliott Abrams, writing about the November 2012 Operation Pillar of Defense, says that Amnesty treats "Hamas and other terrorist groups [...] with an 'evenhandedness' that bespeaks deep biases", citing NGO Monitor's detailed research. The Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs criticised the May 2012 report on administrative detention saying it was "one sided", and "not particularly serious", and "that it seemed little more than a public relations gimmick". Gerald Steinberg, of NGO Monitor, said that the report was tied to the recent Palestinian hunger strikes and that Amnesty "jumped on the bandwagon to help their Palestinian allies". Steinberg also said that one of the researchers, Deborah Hyams, was not a neutral party, saying that "Hyams has volunteered as a 'human shield' in Beit Jala (near Bethlehem) to deter Israeli military responses to gunfire and mortars targeting Jewish civilians in Jerusalem," and that in 2008 she signed a letter claiming Israel is "a state founded on terrorism, massacres and the dispossession of another people from their land".
The heart of the book is his two profound criticisms of the treaty. Firstly, he argues as an economist that Europe could not prosper without an equitable, effective and integrated economic system, which was impossible by the economic terms of the treaty. Secondly, the Allies had committed themselves in the Armistice agreement to critical principles regarding reparations, territorial adjustments, and evenhandedness in economic matters, which were materially breached by the treaty. Keynes reviews the facts whereby the Armistice was based on acceptance by the Allies and Germany of Wilson's Fourteen Points and other terms referred to in making the Armistice. > On 5 October 1918 the German government addressed a brief Note to the > President accepting the Fourteen Points and asking for peace negotiations. > The President's reply of 8 October asked if he was to understand definitely > that the German government accepted 'the terms laid down' in the Fourteen > Points and in his subsequent addresses and 'that its object in entering into > discussion would be only to agree upon the practical details of their > application.

No results under this filter, show 71 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.