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29 Sentences With "serving as a deterrent"

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

Technology is also amplifying awareness of the problem, while serving as a deterrent.
Yet even as cases are built, Ms Batohi believes that the NPA is serving as a deterrent to graft.
Which explains why, far from MMM's looming final crash serving as a deterrent, it has sucked Nigerians into new online scams.
If countries don't believe in that promise, then it stops serving as a deterrent — potentially encouraging Russia to menace a NATO member state.
The Trump administration told Congress in late January that CAATSA was already "serving as a deterrent" and there was no need to actually implement the penalties.
The Trump administration told Congress in late January that CAATSA was already "serving as a deterrent" and there was no need to actually implement the penalties.
The fundamental problem with input disclosure is that in addition to serving as a deterrent to misconduct, it serves as a deterrent to frankness and honesty.
The administration said the legislation authorizing the sanctions is already "serving as a deterrent," and thus the implementation of the penalties isn't needed at this time.
"Sanctions on specific entities or individuals will not need to be imposed because the legislation is, in fact, serving as a deterrent," she said in a statement.
"Sanctions on specific entities or individuals will not need to be imposed because the legislation is, in fact, serving as a deterrent," a State Department official said.
And one technique which is a relatively unsuccessful feature of Cruz's normally, serving as a deterrent, might take on new importance in this bout if Dillashaw plays the aggressor.
This crude, transactional view ignores the many invisible benefits of the alliance to US interests, including serving as a deterrent to Chinese and North Korean aggression in the region.
It's targeted at making life difficult, and even serving as a deterrent, for public servants who carry out controversial agendas, writes Brian Beutler, the editor of The Pod Save America website.
Offenses such as insurrection -- including publishing literature encouraging slaves to rebel -- and assaulting a white person with the intent to kill were punishable by death, serving as a deterrent for black people.
The Trump administration earlier this month declined to impose new sanctions on Russia over the meddling, saying that the threat of increased sanctions is already "serving as a deterrent" to the Kremlin.
" The internal analysis also concluded that the Ugandan withdrawal will also "bolster the L.R.A. — likely leading to a rise in attacks against civilians and serving as a deterrent for future L.R.A. defections.
The notion of certification is important, because in addition to quality, it keeps phones acquired in … less-than-ideal circumstances … from being sold through the company (ideally serving as a deterrent to theft).
A State Department spokesperson said earlier this year that the legislation allowing for the sanctions was already "serving as a deterrent" and there was no need to penalize Russia further at this time.
I mean, those troops are protecting the peace in South Korea and serving as a deterrent should China, and I think we need to ask what is the U.S. willing to put on the table.
My colleague Peter Baker wrote over the weekend about how the threat of impeachment has loomed over many presidents, serving as a deterrent they had to consider when making decisions that crossed into questionable territory.
"From that perspective, if the law is working, sanctions on specific entities or individuals will not need to be imposed because the legislation is, in fact, serving as a deterrent," she said in a statement.
If fake content can be detected with high-enough accuracy, we will be able to not only reduce its reach but also drive up the cost of distributing it, serving as a deterrent to creating it.
The Trump administration told Congress on Monday that bipartisan legislation passed last year authorizing new sanctions on Russia is already "serving as a deterrent," and there's no need to actually implement the penalties at this time.
Furthermore, the administration held off on imposing sanctions on Russia's defense and intelligence sectors, as suggested by the bill, claiming that the law itself was serving as a deterrent to doing business with companies in the sector.
I would go so far as to say that these, combined with the occasional jolting jab were the most effective weapon in Cruz's striking arsenal for much of the bout: One technique which is a relatively unsuccessful feature of Cruz's style normally, serving as a deterrent, might take on new importance in this bout if Dillashaw plays the aggressor.
Johnson authored the bill establishing the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site in western South Dakota. The measure was enacted as Public Law 106–115, creating a new unit of the National Park System. At the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site, visitors can learn about the Cold War, and the nuclear missiles that threatened massive destruction while also serving as a deterrent to war.
As successful as UN deployments can be, they have inadequately spurred independent economic development within the countries where they have intervened. Thus, the UN plays a strong, but indirect role and success in lasting peace is predicated on the development of institutions that support peace, rather than serving as a deterrent for renewed war. Other scholarly analyses show varying success rates for peacekeeping missions, with estimate ranging from 31 percent to 85 percent. According to a 2020 study, non-UN peacekeeping missions are as effective as UN peacekeeping missions.
Originally hauling mainly agricultural products and serving as a deterrent to the Santa Fe building up from the south, the line was converted to narrow gauge in 1923, and later delivered pipe and other construction materials to the local oil and natural gas industry into the 1960s. Portions of the Alamosa–Durango line survive to this day. The Walsenburg–Alamosa–Antonito line survives as the standard-gauge San Luis and Rio Grande Railroad, with passenger excursion trains service provided by the Rio Grande Scenic Railroad. Two narrow-gauge segments survive as steam railroads, the Antonito–Chama line as the Cumbres and Toltec Scenic Railroad and Durango–Silverton as the Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad.
Social reformers in America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries almost invariably found fault with the then-usual practice of treating juvenile offenders essentially the same as adult criminals. It was recognized that the juveniles were often sexually and otherwise exploited by the older inmates and that they were often receiving instruction in more advanced and serious ways of crime by hardened criminals. As a result, rather than their sentences serving as a deterrent to future crimes, many juvenile offenders emerged from incarceration far worse than when they were first sentenced. The reforms, which were adopted more readily in some states than others, consisted of a two-pronged approach: a separate juvenile code and juvenile courts for offenders who had not reached the age of majority, and the building of separate institutions for juvenile "delinquents" (the stigmatizing term "criminal" not being used).

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