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55 Sentences With "governable"

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

But this month's turbulence leaves the president weaker, Brazil less governable and policy adrift.
The five considerations are that the AI be: responsible, equitable, traceable, reliable, and governable.
The stronger Morena grows, he may think, the more governable and harmonious Mexico will become.
Mr Matterella will need all the diplomatic skills he can muster to make Italy governable.
But their rituals, their families and their food — these are governable and protectable across time.
But the events of the past few days leave the president weaker, Brazil less governable and policy adrift.
You are increasing the social divisions in America which will make America less governable and therefore less secure.
Mr Renzi had argued that that the reform was essential to make Italy more governable, and so more amenable to structural reforms.
Twinned with a new, two-round voting system for the lower house, the changes should finally make Italy a governable country, Renzi says.
But the state held together, and far from being ripped apart by the browning of its population, it remains successful, proud, vibrant, and governable.
Their aim is to make Italy, which has had 63 governments in the 70 years since the birth of the Republic, a more governable country.
National morale was at rock-bottom and there were serious people who questioned whether Britain was actually governable, such was the dysfunctional nature of industrial relations.
Ostensibly, the referendum is about whether or not the power of the Italian Senate should be severely curbed in order to make the country more governable.
Others, however, were more concerned with proving our availability to be good citizens and governable subjects: Yes, trans people exist, but we mean you no harm.
Partisans of both sides—the armed irregulars who support the regime, called colectivos, and the street fighters of the "Resistencia"—are becoming more radical and less governable.
Renzi says the project is necessary to make Italy, which has had 63 governments since 1948, governable enough to enact reforms needed to revive its moribund economy.
Personal behavior aside, the "Hastert rule," under which Republicans could support only legislation approved by a majority of their own party, empowered extremists and made America less governable.
"A lot of Americans would be willing to allow California to leave the country, and I don't think it would hurt them altogether, because it would make the country more governable," Marinelli said.
The results create a formidable challenge for the country's reforming prime minister, Matteo Renzi, as he prepares to gamble his career on a referendum in the autumn that he hopes will transform Italy into a more governable country.
A new law passed last year, ostensibly to make Italy more governable, calls for a combination of direct and proportional voting for both the lower Chamber of deputies, which has 630 seats, and the Senate, which has 315 seats.
"We're going to have a huge caucus, perfectly governable, to pass the bills that the society is demanding — to conclude the reforms that are under way," Bivar said, referring to stalled efforts to trim public pensions and close a budget deficit.
If none of the contenders wins an outright majority, a broad coalition, perhaps led by the incumbent prime minister, Paolo Gentiloni, an urbane and competent man who seems broadly acceptable to almost everyone, may be the only way to make Italy governable.
As studios seek to keep their film series going ad infinitum, the most valuable directors are often ones who have exhibited a strong sensibility and sense of ambition but who still lack a body of big-screen work and are thus considered more artistically governable.
It might be that the current stalemate is just a transitional phase, a necessary step on the path from one order to another, and that at some point a group of politicians will figure out how to channel populist energy into a program or coalition that can make Western countries governable again.
If she were able to pursue a different kind of politics, one that seeks to deal with some Republican concerns as well as Democratic ones, she might just hold the new consensus together for longer, reshaping the parties, making the country more governable and burying Mr Trump's offer of an America turned against itself.
By adhering to the principles of healthism, our personal goals are aligned with political goals and we are thus rendered governable.
Yet those same technological advances that made nation-states and empires governable now whisk capital and information ungovernably across their frontiers.
As early as 963, Lusatia -- and even upper and lower Lusatia -- and the Ostmark were distinguishable as governable provinces within Gero's march.
Ferlie, E., Fitzgerald, L., McGivern, G., Dopson, S. & Bennett, C. (2013) 'Making Wicked Problems Governable?: The Case of Managed Networks in Health Care.' Oxford University PressFerlie, E., McGivern, G. & Fitzgerald, L. (2012) 'A New Mode of Organising in Health Care? UK Cancer Services & Governmentality'.
ScholarsFerlie, E., Fitzgerald, L., McGivern, G., Dopson, S., & Bennett, C. (2013) Making Wicked Problems Governable? : The Case of Managed Networks in Health Care. Oxford: Oxford University PressFerlie, E., McGivern, G., & Fitzgerald, L. (2012) A new mode of organizing health care? Governmentality and managed networks in cancer services.
The Conquering of Climate: Discourses of Fear and Their Dissolution. The Geographical Journal. Vol. 174, No. 1 He questions whether the climate is governable and argues that it is way too optimistic and even hubristic to attempt to control the global climate by universal governance regimes. Mike Hulme. 2008.
Oxford Six six-light saloon registered April 1934 The Oxford, Isis and Twenty-five were singled out and given "automatic clutch control" described by The Times as automatism. The Oxford also received a governable free-wheel, bigger seats, a spare wheel cover and concealed ashtrays for back seat passengers.Cars Of 1934. The Times, Monday, Aug 28, 1933; pg.
This was probably a vain hope, since, as discussed below, even today economists and economic historians cannot agree about what is the correct theory of money. Wolfgang Streeck states that "money is easily the most unpredictable and least governable human institution we have ever known".Wolfgang Streeck, "The Fourth Power?". New Left Review #110, March–April 2018, p. 141.
The airport is owned and operated by the State-owned enterprise Kauno Aerouostas, and is fully governable to the Ministry of Transport and Communications. In May 2013, the Government announced about the plans to merge Vilnius, Kaunas and Palanga airports into one company and the plans were approved by the Lithuanian parliament in November 2013. The merger took place in 2014.
They were probably there before Charlemagne, but he encouraged them to settle along the Baltic. Adalbert's Danzig was not only Christian but very recently under Slavic control, if not to some degree Slavic speaking. After Adalbert events moved rapidly to produce great changes. Pomerania as a governable territory appeared in the 10th century; by the 11th the initial state of Poland had formed and was contending with the Dukes of Pomerania for control.
Broadly summarized, Dunn’s work investigates governance, the state, and the ways in which these processes strive to produce governable subjects. She investigates these topics by examining the ways they are manifest in people’s lived experiences. Though all Dunn’s work deals with these topics, thematically, it can be divided into three bodies of literature: on foreign direct investment (FDI) in Poland and the former Eastern Bloc more broadly; on global food safety regulation; and, most recently, on forced migration.
Lemke, 2001:202 These collective yardsticks are determined by the norms previously discussed. Self- esteem is a technology of self for "evaluating and acting upon ourselves so that the police, the guards and the doctors do not have to do so".Cruikshank, 1996:234 By taking up the goal of self-esteem, we allow ourselves to be governable from a distance. The technology of self-esteem and other similar psychological technologies also borrow from technologies of the market, namely consumption.
Many and perhaps most slaves were governable during the war, especially in the early years.Woodward 2014, p107-108 Escaping slaves who were caught on their way to freedom were usually very harshly dealt with and frequently executed.Woodward 2014, p120 Confederates emphasized negative aspects of the transition from slavery to freedom in discussions with their slaves and in letters and conversations during the period. Letters from captured Confederate soldiers noted the poor housing conditions and dress of freedmen they saw in Union held cities.
In her work on global food safety regulation, Dunn examines how the state reacts to outbreaks or changing incidence of food-borne illness. She examines the state’s attempts to control or eliminate these diseases via regulation, while nevertheless adhering to its own foundational, politico- economic principles (e.g. socialist, planned economy; neoliberal capitalism). She identifies the ways in which processes of food production and the regulation thereof work to produce governable subjects by instilling particular values of self-governance or dependence on the state.
McMorris Rodgers and Conference Vice Chairwoman Lynn Jenkins defended Boehner, saying the matter was handled properly, as conference rules give him sole discretion. Rich Lowry of National Review asked McCarthy in a phone interview if the House was governable, to which McCarthy replied "I don’t know. Sometimes you have to hit rock bottom." Charlie Dent, a Republican from Pennsylvania who had supported McCarthy, suggested that if Republicans are unable to agree on a candidate, the best option might be for a bipartisan coalition to select a Speaker.
Despite more than $33 million spent supporting candidates in the 2012 Congressional races, Chamber-backed candidates lost 36 out of the 50 elections in which the Chamber participated. In late 2013 the Chamber announced it would distribute campaign contributions in "10s" of Republican primary elections to oppose the Tea Party movement and create a "more governable Republican party." In early 2014 Tom Donohue clarified that the push would be to elect "pro- business" members of Congress "who favor trade, energy development and immigration reform".
Oxford Six six-light saloon registered April 1934 All Morris cars for 1934, this was announced in August 1933, were to have 4-speed synchromesh gearboxes, dipping headlights, hydraulic shock absorbers, hydraulic brakes, rear petrol tank, direction indicators, safety glass and automatic ignition. The Oxford, Isis and Twenty- five were singled out and given "automatic clutch control" described by The Times as automatism. The Oxford also received a governable free-wheel, bigger seats, a spare wheel cover and concealed ashtrays for back seat passengers.Cars Of 1934.
Subsequent historians have agreed with Elton as to Cromwell's importance, though not with his claims of "revolution". Leithead (2004) wrote, "Against significant opposition he secured acceptance of the king's new powers, created a more united and more easily governable kingdom, and provided the crown, at least temporarily, with a very significant landed endowment." Diarmaid MacCulloch credits the advancement of the most significant politicians and administrators of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, including William Cecil and Nicholas Bacon, to the influence and guidance of Thomas Cromwell at the start of their careers.
The social and physical environment of Colonial Mexico was likely key in allowing the Outbreak of 1545–1548 to reach the heights that it did. Already weakened by war and earlier disease outbreaks, the Aztecs were forced into easily governable reducciones (congregations) that focused on agricultural production and conversion to Christianity. The reducciones would have not only brought people in much closer contact to one another, but with animals, as well. Whether it is rats, chickens, pigs, or cattle, animals imported from the Old World were potentially disease vectors for illnesses of New and Old World origins.
Reginald departs in anger and Mr Johnson berates his wife's involvement with Lady Susan (who later says of him, he is 'too old to be governable and too young to die'). Narrowly missing a departing Lord Manwaring, a distressed Reginald confronts Lady Susan, who turns the tables on him and says they cannot be married after all as he doubts her word and cannot trust her. Reginald returns to his sister's home, Lady Susan marries Sir James, and Reginald falls in love with Frederica, and the two are also soon married. Effectively, the two women have switched beaus.
In the preface, Shaw speaks of the pervasive discouragement and poverty in Europe after World War I, and relates these issues to inept government. Simple primitive societies, he says, were easily governable while the civilized societies of the twentieth century are so complex that learning to govern them properly can't be accomplished within the human lifespan: People with experience enough to serve the purpose fall into senility and die. Shaw's solution is enhanced longevity: we must learn to live much longer; a centenarian should be less than middle aged. (Shaw was in his mid-60s when the plays were written).
General elections were held in Romania in December 1867 (New Style: December 1867 – January 1868), and were won by a coalition of liberal-and-radical groups, or "Concordia Agreement", formed around incumbent Prime Minister Ștefan Golescu. Concordia brought together the left-leaning "Reds", the Free and Independent Faction, and a moderate liberal section under Mihail Kogălniceanu. The latter split the moderate vote, ensuring defeat for the opposition led by Ion Ghica, which came in third, after the conservative "Whites". The reconfiguration made the country more governable, at a time of financial crisis and riotous disputes over the issue of Jewish emancipation.
The political group of unitarian democrats was dissatisfied with the slowness of the progress of the Dutch parliament, the National Assembly of the Batavian Republic. They were in favour of a central authority, opposed federalism, and wanted general elections. Conservatives and moderates stood against such demands, and the country had become un- governable, without prospects of drafting a constitution. Under the leadership of Pieter Vreede, the unitarian democrats engineered a coup d'état on January 22, 1798, with the help of general Herman Willem Daendels, and began to rule as the Uitvoerend Bewind, which soon became highly unpopular among their own supporters in the country.
His works include A Republic in the Making, India in the 1950s, (Oxford University Press, 2017) which looks at the critical first decade of independent India. Book Review in Outlook Book review in Business Standard Kudaisya earlier worked in collaboration with the Singapore historian Tan Tai Yong on Partition and its aftermath. Together, they authored The Aftermath of Partition in South Asia, (London, Routledge, 2000) and edited the three-volume Partition and Post Colonial South Asia (Routledge, 2008) Kudaisya has also written extensively on the political history of Uttar Pradesh. His work Region, Nation, Heartland: Uttar Pradesh in India's Body Politic (Sage, 2006) proposed the idea of dividing Uttar Pradesh into three different regions to make it governable.
It was the product of an effort to make alien peoples and territories governable through the invention of categories of savage and civilized. In respect of colonial Balochistan, Simanti Dutta points out that Sandeman skillfully exploited an existing rift between the Baloch ruler, the Khan of Kalat, and his subordinate tribal chiefs to leverage his influence and project British power into a region which was strategically significant in the context of Anglo-Russian rivalry in Afghanistan. A careful examination of historical records suggests that there were a number of armed uprisings against British rule in Balochistan during and after Sandeman's tenure which had to be put down through the use of lethal force and imposition of crippling financial penalties on the defaulting tribes.
Research over the last two decades has shown the value of computer-assisted argumentation techniques in improving the effectiveness of cross-stakeholder communication. The technique of dialogue mapping has been used in tackling wicked problems in organizations using a collaborative approach. More recently, in a four-year study of interorganizational collaboration across public, private, and voluntary sectors, steering by government was found to perversely undermine a successful collaboration, producing an organizational crisis which led to the collapse of a national initiative. In "Wholesome Design for Wicked Problems", Robert Knapp stated that there are ways forward in dealing with wicked problems: Examining networks designed to tackle wicked problems in health care, such as caring for older people or reducing sexually transmitted infections, Ferlie and colleagues suggest that managed networks may be the "least bad" way of "making wicked problems governable".
This provides the city and actors within the city to reassert their ability to regulate infrastructural aspects which are related to carbon governance. Certain practices, such as transport, pollution and urban development can be better monitored, regulated and managed through the territorialisation of carbon governance. Although there are several greenhouse gases which contribute to global warming, carbon represents the key relation between the state and nature (Rice, 2010). It is through carbon that climate and climate change can be made relevant and connected to practices within a specific geographical area, such as a state. This territorial ‘carbon breakdown’ or territorialisation of carbon governance is what provides states with the political power to address climate issues within their jurisdiction. This is an example of how Seattle has been able use climate as a ‘conceptual resource’ in order to make urban climate more governable.
As researchers began to explore the application of ecogovernmentality to climate change problems and discourses, most studies focused on national and global scales. For example, an early study by Paul Henman applied governmentality to Australian national policy and climate change modeling, concluding that modeling was a technology for rendering climate governable though it would limit the capacity of government to respond. Sverker Jagers and Johannes Stripple's work published in 2003 identified the importance of non-nation-state actors (NNSAs) in climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts and suggested that "private regimes" like the insurance industry may be more successful than national and global power structures in addressing the problem. Studies applying governmentality to climate change picked up in frequency in the mid-2000s. Angela Oels’ 2005 paper summarizes the initial forays into governmentality- based analyses for climate change discourses and suggested that the functioning governmentality of the issue had shifted since the 1980s, from a biopower-based discourse to one rooted in advanced liberal government.
In 1966 Canadian Domina Jalbert was granted a patent for a multi-cell wing type aerial device - "a wing having a flexible canopy constituting an upper skin and with a plurality of longitudinally extending ribs forming in effect a wing corresponding to an airplane wing airfoil..." "More particularly the invention contemplates the provision of a wing of rectangular or other shape having a canopy or top skin and a lower spaced apart bottom skin..." a governable gliding parachute with multi-cells and controls for glide. In 1954, Walter Neumark predicted (in an article in Flight magazine) a time when a glider pilot would be "able to launch himself by running over the edge of a cliff or down a slope ... whether on a rock- climbing holiday in Skye or skiing in the Alps."Walter Neumark, "The Future of Soaring", Flight magazine, 14 May 1954 In 1961, the French engineer Pierre Lemongine produced improved parachute designs that led to the Para-Commander. The PC had cutouts at the rear and sides that enabled it to be towed into the air and steered, leading to parasailing/parascending.
Much of Dunn’s work on forced migration has looked more specifically at the plight of internally displaced persons in the republic of Georgia. In this work, Dunn builds on scholarship that has critically examined the phenomenon of humanitarian aid – its penchant for providing immediate aid rather than long-term support, the resultant inadequacy of ‘standardized’ aid packages, its responsibility to local elites and foreign donors, and the divisive question of aid in relation to politics. Examining these questions herself, and using them as a foundation, she identifies how humanitarian aid functions as a condition, keeping the ‘recipients’ of aid in a state of limbo, between the past and the future, unsure of what to expect from the future, and therefore unable to act in the present. Finally, she investigates the ways in which this condition, constantly reproduced by the very structures which claim to provide stability and relief, in fact transforms the recipients of aid into easily governable subjects, beholden to a system that insists on maintaining their physical lives, while denying them the solid footing from which to end their reliance on this same system.

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