This is largely a good thing, as progress requires co-operation, and co-operation demands trust.
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It is the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, not the Organization for Security Co-operation in Europe.
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Mr Macron's idea was born out of French impatience with the EU's efforts at defence co-operation, known inelegantly as Permanent Structured Co-operation (PESCO).
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For example, co-operating in a repeated prisoner's dilemma can be a Nash equilibrium if players condition their co-operation on others' past co-operation.
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Today's economy and financial system depend on global co-operation; today's political system is one where such co-operation is increasingly seen by voters as intrinsically suspicious.
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Elsewhere Greater regional co-operation will be seen in East Africa through joint infrastructure projects, and continent-wide co-operation will advance through initiatives such as the African Union passport.
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The EU launched a new defence co-operation arrangement, dubbed EI2.
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In such a world, competition is more likely than co-operation.
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Biologists know of two ways co-operation between organisms can evolve.
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"The timber arrives in co-operation with the government," he said.
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But senior Jordanian generals suggest co-operation with Mr Assad's forces.
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Deporting undocumented immigrants without local co-operation is much more difficult.
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Still, without common values, co-operation is likely to remain limited.
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So what is the effect of all this security co-operation?
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UMC said it would halt all research co-operation with Jinhua.
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Mr Carter calls America a "catalyst" for co-operation in Asia.
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Co-operation with France does not appear to be a priority.
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Yet the promises of future co-operation were just as thin.
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Deep change generally requires co-operation with governments and social mobilisation.
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The facts speak for themselves about China's co-operation with Africa.
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That will require more co-operation and a willingness to compromise.
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For this China's co-operation, or at least acquiescence, is vital.
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Now their co-operation is perhaps the main reason for optimism.
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In fact, any change requiring bipartisan co-operation will be difficult.
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Europe also has a role in security and intelligence co-operation.
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AMLO's statism does not preclude co-operation with the private sector.
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Political disagreements threaten co-operation between Somalia's federal and regional forces.
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Both countries' central banks have also agreed to technical co-operation.
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This model would be maintained by close co-operation between regulators.
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The other principle on which the relations between the church and the state are based is the principle of co-operation in the areas in which such co-operation is necessary and deemed timely by both sides.
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At municipal level there are signs of informal CDU-AfD co-operation.
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Domestic security co-operation on terrorism and crime is closer than ever.
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The idea of enhanced co-operation has recently picked up renewed interest.
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Both countries have a clear interest in keeping such co-operation going.
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Demographic trends are another reason that global co-operation is so important.
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If so, the danger is of a ratcheting-down of co-operation.
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Some have set up their own offices for inter-Korean co-operation.
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That offers avenues for co-operation with other countries, but also vulnerabilities.
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Co-operation may be better with humans out of the loop, too.
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Everybody agrees that maintaining co-operation on defence and security is desirable.
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Britain and Ireland have identified 266 areas of cross-border co-operation.
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Without their co-operation as witnesses, none of this would be possible.
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It could also help deepen co-operation between commercial and military shipbuilders.
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Co-operation is back in, says Stéphane Dion, the new foreign minister.
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Co-operation with troops in Chad, Cameroon and Niger has also improved.
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It gets money, assistance with security and intelligence co-operation from Britain.
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By going it alone the commission risks stoking conflict, not co-operation.
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Politicians heralded Prosavana as a landmark example of "South-South" co-operation.
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The nub of it is said to be "win-win co-operation".
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But the "system of national co-operation" is nothing if not thorough.
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You need their active co-operation in creating just the right parts.
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Without that essential level of discursive co-operation, shifts in perception aren't possible.
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They rely heavily on co-operation of witnesses, who may not be forthcoming.
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The EU treaties were later amended to allow "enhanced co-operation" of subgroups.
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Co-operation between Barack Obama and Xi Jinping made the Paris agreement possible.
|
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Rosneft has signed a memorandum of co-operation with Libya's National Oil Corporation.
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She stressed the need to retain co-operation on foreign policy and security.
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Security co-operation is one of the few things its government can offer.
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Ties with India have strengthened through civilian nuclear co-operation and weapons sales.
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The two countries signed a defence agreement committing them to deeper co-operation.
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International co-operation in the fight against terrorism and organised crime is vital.
|
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In another trade-off, governments rely on close co-operation with technology companies.
|
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So Mr Abbas has nothing to gain by ending co-operation with Israel.
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Around the same time, Kuwait signed a military co-operation agreement with Turkey.
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The trade war between China and America is hardly conducive to co-operation.
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Quietly, co-operation between governments and internet firms is picking up once more.
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Mr Trump's friendly campaign rhetoric about Russia is no guarantee of co-operation.
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Cross-party co-operation in a hung Parliament has become a key factor.
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Co-operation in such places depends on the personalities of the politicians involved.
|
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But as relations with Russia deteriorate, Swedish co-operation with NATO is increasing.
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In a world that depends on co-operation, there is too much nationalism.
|
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As an exercise in cultural co-operation and "soft diplomacy", it is unprecedented.
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Some regions have made progress through co-operation between doctors, patients and activists.
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In linguistically divided Belgium, inter-agency co-operation is known to be dire.
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Lego games have long been about player co-operation—even when experienced alone.
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More co-operation between government, training providers and employers over certification would help.
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"It's deliberate" added Vidal, referring to Mexico's ongoing co-operation with President Trump.
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The conditions were in place for effective co-operation on Syria, Putin added.
|
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There is already a lot of co-operation between mosques and the FBI.
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The administration says it will do what it can without congressional co-operation.
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It has pledged full co-operation with these and other pending legal investigations.
|
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The company is also calling for co-operation across industries regarding the issue.
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Presumably the bees were chosen as emblem of co-operation and visual motif.
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Take the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation (SCO), which was created in the late 1990s.
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It has been conducted fairly, with the full co-operation of other NSC attendees.
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Unprecedented cross-border co-operation was needed to fend off the crisis in 2008.
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He said Innogy already had co-operation agreements in place with seven local startups.
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For a party unused to co-operation with civil society, this posed a challenge.
|
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Cross-border problems could have been avoided through greater international co-operation earlier on.
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Lady Scotland hails the club's Blue Charter, which boosts co-operation on ocean issues.
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Brokered through the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, it fosters transparency.
|
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In 2016 intelligence co-operation thwarted an attack on an Israel-Albania football match.
|
|
American and Chinese co-operation made the UN deal possible in the first place.
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He did not give any details on prospective partners nor existing co-operation agreements.
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Peace, friendship and co-operation are what China wants for the South China Sea.
|
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American naval and marine-corps commanders have been in Vietnam to explore co-operation.
|
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But Mr Malpass seems unusually ambivalent about this kind of co-operation and assimilation.
|
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Co-operation and Development in 2015 found that of the 72 countries surveyed, France
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"The discussions explored a number of other areas of co-operation," one source said.
|
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This model would be maintained by close co-operation between regulators and financial policymakers.
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OSCE is the 22019-member country Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.
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She'd like to see the U.S. press Havana to enact social reforms as a condition of continued economic co-operation She sees an opportunity for Trump administration to press Havana for greater social reform as a condition of continued economic co-operation.
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On November 13th 23 EU members, including Germany, Poland and the Baltic states, signed up to PESCO (an acronym for "permanent structured co-operation"), a mechanism for defence co-operation agreements that backers hope will be the embryo of a future defence union.
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Left-wing governments in South America preferred "south-south co-operation" to ties with Europe.
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Gary Cohn, the director of the National Economic Council, supports free trade and co-operation.
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The government's intention is that the FARC's co-operation will help to lessen such resistance.
|
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Without active American support and participation, the machinery of global co-operation could well fail.
|
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Perhaps, through mutual co-operation, golfers and communists could eventually come to understand each other.
|
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Mr Trump thanked them, as well as Russia, Syria and Iraq for their co-operation.
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At the heart of this must be efforts to establish durable patterns of co-operation.
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Yet China's likely trajectory in the coming years will make co-operation harder, not easier.
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All this would need the co-operation of the opposition and of the international community.
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It calls this a system of "multiparty co-operation", which involves "sharing weal or woe".
|
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But attacks have decreased and co-operation between police and informants is on the up.
|
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) estimates 13.6 million lost US jobs.
|
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This month France's president, Emmanuel Macron, visited it to discuss co-operation in fighting jihadists.
|
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For now, co-operation between criminals and politicians has given way to all-out conflict.
|
|
The lawmakers also called for closer co-operation between tech firms and law enforcement agencies.
|
|
But perhaps most important from Washington's perspective is the regime's co-operation in fighting terrorism.
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To successfully confront these three problems we need more, rather than less, global co-operation.
|
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Much more is earmarked for areas that demand European co-operation, like migration and defence.
|
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As America eschews global co-operation, its firms will also face more duplicative regulation abroad.
|
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EVERYONE knew this year's summit of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) would be contentious.
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The human psyche may demand a tribe, but the progress of humanity demands co-operation.
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Men score higher on measures of anger, and lower on co-operation and self-discipline.
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There will be close co-operation with Emmanuel Macron on defence integration and tax harmonisation.
|
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The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development called last week for higher public investment.
|
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On March 2nd the six-member Gulf Co-operation Council designated Hizbullah a terrorist organisation.
|
|
Bolivia and Paraguay followed up their swaps by signing agreements to increase economic co-operation.
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Britain had already cut off almost all co-operation with the FSB after the killing .
|
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Inter-agency co-operation has improved, but privacy-protection still hinders the sharing of data.
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The underlying reality is of more trust and co-operation than ever before, he says.
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And co-operation means compromise, and compromise means we won't always get what we want.
|
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He has ordered the opening of more frontier posts and pledged co-operation over hydropower.
|
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But home regulators can only operate efficiently if they have the co-operation of hosts.
|
|
And the car industry's supply chains are lines of co-operation as well as commerce.
|
|
"Discretionary mechanisms and co-operation in hierarchies: An experimental study", Journal of Economic Psychology 74
|
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The government criticised his "hostile rhetoric" but said it will continue "respectful dialogue and co-operation".
|
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"The unequal distribution of benefits from globalization has increased scepticism about international co-operation," she said.
|
|
The annual Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit was marred by tensions between America and China.
|
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In doing so they have split the Gulf Co-operation Council, the club of oil monarchies.
|
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Turkish co-operation in the fight against Islamic State and organized crime may also be restricted.
|
|
For the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), though, tensions with Iran border on an existential issue.
|
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Law enforcement is often left to NGOs with patchy co-operation from the country's Forestry Administration.
|
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The EU adopted a new China strategy in 2016 envisaging greater co-operation between member states.
|
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It has signed up to agencies that foster co-operation in anti-terrorism, research and defence.
|
|
What is needed, they said, is more international co-operation—but not of the old kind.
|
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With clever pricing, clearer ownership and a bit of co-operation, water scarcity can be alleviated.
|
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The refugee agreement, which is just about holding, may provide a model for future co-operation.
|
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A new report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development sketches out the situation.
|
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It is hard to imagine Mr Trump's successors arguing for a return to trustful co-operation.
|
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Of course, disease and poverty are not the only major problems that require global co-operation.
|
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But amending the sequester may require 60 votes in the Senate, and hence bipartisan co-operation.
|
|
A more stable solution to the US-China tensions would involve co-operation with other countries.
|
|
Mindful of that past co-operation, Mr Pang is optimistic that the current chill will pass.
|
|
One obvious tweak would add a deeper system of co-operation on foreign and security policies.
|
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That's the upshot of the latest forecasts from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
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Climate change, migration and tax-dodging will be even harder to solve without global co-operation.
|
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Likewise, Israel supplies Jordan with water, and security co-operation against the so-called Islamic State.
|
|
Earlier this month city officials held a conference about civil-military co-operation in building one.
|
|
Police have stepped up surveillance and co-operation with other European countries to curb weapons-smuggling.
|
|
SEVENTY years ago America passed the Economic Co-operation Act, better known as the Marshall Plan.
|
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Areas of co-operation are expected to include work on cyber security, training and maritime patrols.
|
|
Another goal of the Franco-German plan is something called "permanent structured co-operation", or PESCO.
|
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Earlier he was a senior economist at the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
|
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El Chapo's arrest should also encourage closer co-operation between Mexican and American law-enforcement authorities.
|
|
South Korea has the fastest ageing population among Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development nations.
|
|
Moreover, British diplomats believe that Russian co-operation is essential for any peace deal in Syria.
|
|
NATO suspended all co-operation with Russia after its annexation of Crimea and invasion of Ukraine.
|
|
The controversy over TTIP in Europe, by contrast, is about standard-setting and regulatory co-operation.
|
|
Kenya's security has been improving, thanks in part to increased intelligence co-operation with Western countries.
|
|
Amid the growing competition for deals, co-operation may be the way forward, some analysts said.
|
|
One of the latest to do so is the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
Mr Orban refers to the result of these efforts as the "system of national co-operation".
|
|
And while new defence schemes may eventually build habits of co-operation, it will take time.
|
|
"The unequal distribution of benefits from globalisation has increased scepticism about international co-operation," she said.
|
|
She unveiled a new policy statement aimed at achieving greater political co-operation between the two regions.
|
|
Rather, it is the result of "the end of an era of bipartisan co-operation over nominations".
|
|
Without the army's co-operation, there can be no peace between the state and the rebel groups.
|
|
Another is America's resumption of sanctions on Iran, which pushes that country to seek co-operation elsewhere.
|
|
Yet other Europeans seem more concerned with Macedonian co-operation on migrants than with its democratic evolution.
|
|
A rich basis for such co-operation is already in place (see chart), and perhaps widely underappreciated.
|
|
Above all, both America and China need to remember that the alternative to co-operation is confrontation.
|
|
Again, co-operation with technology companies, and sometimes with other banks, is the order of the day.
|
|
A better idea, until drugs are legalised, would be to strengthen co-operation between Peru and Bolivia.
|
|
Co-operation ceased in 2009, after multilateral negotiations broke down and North Korea started producing plutonium again.
|
|
That would further poison relations with the United States, possibly imperilling co-operation over drugs and immigration.
|
|
The row could also worsen the legal and practical difficulties over broader co-operation on domestic security.
|
|
Its success, if it lasts, may open the door to deeper co-operation between America and Russia.
|
|
China says the Kyauk Pyu development is based on "win-win" co-operation between the two countries.
|
|
The system of co-operation works by sticking to technical details and avoiding blame or other agendas.
|
|
But he still needs co-operation from Congress elsewhere, for example if he wants to renegotiate NAFTA.
|
|
Both countries fret about Mr Trump's disdain for NATO and want to strengthen European defence co-operation.
|
|
A greater capacity for tolerance and co-operation allowed the creation of large, stable settlements and civilisations.
|
|
Instead of reaping the benefits of co-operation, Iran has been cut off from the global economy.
|
|
The "humanitarian corridors" initiative is an impressive case of inter-faith co-operation in a humanitarian cause.
|
|
"We agreed on close co-operation to combat terrorism in the region," tweeted Iran's deputy foreign minister.
|
|
The Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) trimmed its global economic growth forecasts for 2019.
|
|
Earlier in September the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development warned that monetary policy is overstrained .
|
|
South Korea has the fastest aging population among Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) nations.
|
|
Last year its leader, Matteo Salvini, signed a co-operation agreement with Mr Putin's party, United Russia.
|
|
So the countries have time to build new dams; but that will need even greater co-operation.
|
|
So perhaps the Aramco IPO will be the high-water mark of Saudi Arabia's co-operation efforts.
|
|
She was previously the deputy director of environment for the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
But, paradoxically, the C919 has only got this far because of the co-operation of western suppliers.
|
|
Loyal co-operation and communication of Member States and institutions - Bratislava is the beginning of a process.
|
|
Meanwhile, ASEAN members have boosted naval co-operation and defence ties with America, Australia, Japan and India.
|
|
Mr Tusk's limited aim was to diagnose common problems and to identify areas of potential co-operation.
|
|
Such technical hurdles can be overcome only with a high degree of co-operation between all involved.
|
|
Putting a brave face on things, Mr Sarkozy visited Britain to sign a naval co-operation deal.
|
|
Hungary is already covered by the co-operation agreement, with Bulgaria and Croatia joining shortly, OTP said.
|
|
Turkey will appoint Basci ambassador to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Davutoglu said.
|
|
"Whether there will be a Hungary, where co-operation means more than just a slogan," Borokai wrote.
|
|
Such as new redress possibilities for EU individuals and co-operation channels with European data protection authorities.
|
|
For years now, both sides have recognized a mutual interest in co-operation to prevent terror attacks.
|
|
For all the excitable rhetoric, the immediate consequences for security co-operation are unlikely to be severe.
|
|
The commissioner notes hopefully that American politicians and businessmen continue to troop through Brussels preaching co-operation.
|
|
This despite Facebook spin and the ready co-operation of the anti-Trump sections of the media.
|
|
Xi Jinping, China's president, has said it will create a new model of "win-win co-operation".
|
|
McCain urged China to shift from what he called coercion and intimidation of neighbors to co-operation.
|
|
That's why we at Deutsche Bank have already got some good co-operation projects off the ground.
|
|
Plans for the Gulf Co-operation Council to forge a common foreign and economic policy lie in tatters.
|
|
The spat has split the Gulf Co-operation Council, hitherto a force for stability in an unstable region.
|
|
He planned far more co-operation and probably had the backing of the French government for a merger.
|
|
But in other ways, it is a stunning demonstration of the public's thirst for cross-party co-operation.
|
|
In February, The United Kingdom and Israel announced an agreement to deepen co-operation to tackle cyber-attacks.
|
|
"It goes against the world trend of peace, co-operation and development," the embassy said on its website.
|
|
"Synchrony has also been linked to oxytocin release in humans, which promotes trust and co-operation," King said.
|
|
And that co-operation, as James Barr makes clear in "Lords of the Desert", was not always forthcoming.
|
|
Both presidents, the officials say, want deeper co-operation on everything from nuclear energy to fighting organised crime.
|
|
Another big reason for the effectiveness of governments' response to the 2008-09 crisis was international co-operation.
|
|
Enhanced co-operation has been used but thrice, for cross-border divorce, the European patent and property rights.
|
|
Security co-operation would also suffer as Britain fell out of the European Arrest Warrant and intelligence databases.
|
|
He has some leverage: Mexican non-co-operation on trade, drugs and migrants could hurt the United States.
|
|
American and Chinese leadership has achieved unprecedented levels of international co-operation on climate in the past year.
|
|
One factor that may have pushed it over the edge is Moscow's co-operation with Tehran in Syria.
|
|
Ahead of the Sochi summit Mr Putin claimed more than 30 military co-operation deals with African states.
|
|
His signature economic reform, a labour-market liberalisation called "Agenda 2010", was conceived in co-operation with businesses.
|
|
The irony is that likely solutions require international co-operation, the very thing that populism makes more difficult.
|
|
The regime has in the past used this co-operation to justify breaking ceasefires and bombing rebel positions.
|
|
A second track makes arrangements for future relations, from trade to co-operation on security or law enforcement.
|
|
Its state-owned oil giant, Rosneft, signed a co-operation agreement with Libya's National Oil Corporation last month.
|
|
None of this mattered much when Gulf citizens could travel freely within the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC).
|
|
Mr Macron is deeply unpopular at home and seems to have given up on substantial German co-operation.
|
|
He is writing letters and has released more recordings of Mr Tkachev trying to win his co-operation.
|
|
The idea at the heart of the plan is to roll back competition in favour of co-operation.
|
|
Scholz has asked the Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development (OECD) to consider the proposal, the newspaper said.
|
|
Cross-border co-operation on defence and security offers the best chance to kick-start Europe's stalled integration.
|
|
However, this needs the co-operation of Western internet platforms such as Facebook and Google, which owns YouTube.
|
|
What could be better than an all-seeing eye that enforces co-operation between friends and strangers alike?
|
|
Permanent Structured Co-operation (PESCO), a scheme of joint arms production and defence integration, had followed in 2017.
|
|
One response in London to such obstacles is to stress the benefits to all sides from co-operation.
|
|
Other nationalists adopt an even more extreme position, saying that we don't need any global co-operation whatsoever.
|
|
Adam Schiff, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, praised Deutsche for its assiduous co-operation with congressional investigators.
|
|
Human-rights groups also worry that EU co-operation with the Libyan coastguard may be harmful to migrants.
|
|
He has denounced any Western co-operation with Iran, even if it served to limit Iran's nuclear programme.
|
|
And national and global co-operation, which is needed to agree on spending policies, is under strain. 6.
|
|
University attendance has exploded, which suggests that Britain will become more internationalist and comfortable with EU co-operation.
|
|
Indeed, British ministers declared in July they were aiming for continued co-operation in drug regulation after Brexit.
|
|
To ensure that undersea sex is not subverted by overfishing and environmental degradation will require global co-operation.
|
|
South Africa's deputy president visited Iran in November to explore opportunities for co-operation in the energy sector.
|
|
Banks discussed fintech, digitisation and the need for co-operation on cutting edge technology according to one source.
|
|
Social mobility in this country is among the worst in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
That followed another forecast for weaker economic growth from the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation & Development on Wednesday.
|
|
Nations would be bound by local spheres of influence with little regard for global co-operation or trade.
|
|
And it provides a way for Europe to seek Mr Erdogan's co-operation without flinching from criticising him.
|
|
In Belgium itself, politically riven between two language groups, inter-agency co-operation is known to be dire.
|
|
" He added: "Our basic assumption is that it will be done in close co-operation with the IMF.
|
|
It was preceded by another display of co-operation: America and China ratified the Paris climate-change agreement.
|
|
CO-OPERATION Airbus has been badly shaken by the existing corruption probes, which have already clipped aircraft sales.
|
|
Loose co-operation to develop engines and individual models generally do not bring the cost saving they might.
|
|
Small wonder that activists think they hear him declaring the Democrats a party unfit for bipartisan co-operation.
|
|
Last year the Organisation for Economic Co Operation and Development unveiled new measures to tackle corporate tax avoidance.
|
|
Hong Kong signed an agreement this week with Britain to deepen commercial co-operation in the maritime sector.
|
|
It's unclear how effective American sanctions can be without co-operation from European allies or other world powers.
|
|
Almost 8 million lives have been saved by treatments for HIV developed with similar co-operation since 2000.
|
|
This affects morale and recruitment; their NATO co-operation troops have to work hard to keep them going.
|
|
On Saturday, Pence represented the U.S. at an Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation summit in Papua New Guinea.
|
|
A U.S. prosecutor said last month Andrew had provided "zero co-operation" to the investigation into Epstein's activities.
|
|
Fianna Fail instead entered a co-operation deal to facilitate a Fine Gael-led minority administration from opposition.
|
|
Expansion of global growth "may have peaked" according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
|
|
All those countries also appeared on the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's 2018 list of fragile states.
|
|
Returning them would require robust co-operation from the migrants' home countries, which they are often unwilling to give.
|
|
The first is that Europe needs Turkey's co-operation on migration and terrorism, so must handle the country delicately.
|
|
We're the only nation in the [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] that doesn't offer universal health care.
|
|
Past co-operation initiatives have not been financial hits: operations at the Kaesong industrial park were suspended in 2016.
|
|
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's commerce ministry said on Thursday co-operation is the only "correct direction" for the China-U.
|
|
The treaty established forms of international co-operation that extended far beyond the intergovernmental arrangements familiar to most diplomats.
|
|
That is the second-lowest after Turkey among member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
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Joint naval patrols continue, as does co-operation in Mindanao; and America still has five bases on Philippine soil.
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Oversight needs not just to bring together a range of government agencies; it requires co-operation between governments, too.
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Handling Mr Kim's belligerence—and the regime's eventual demise—will be a huge test of great-power co-operation.
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Only when these are in place can it start negotiating its own nuclear co-operation agreements with other countries.
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Neither side wants to end all co-operation and it is unlikely, given their economic inter-dependence, they could.
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Some even hope this innocuous step may prove habit-forming, paving the way for co-operation on trickier issues.
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If this happens, free-traders will surely grumble that Mr Trump has again chosen commercial conflict over co-operation.
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For one, South Koreans are not as enthusiastic as their president about economic co-operation with their impoverished neighbours.
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It is also pursuing greater co-operation with FlyDubai, a low-cost airline based in Dubai, to achieve this.
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But they stopped when their co-operation was revealed in the classified material leaked by Edward Snowden in 2013.
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As the rancour at the G7 suggests, the scope for international co-operation in a crisis has surely diminished.
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They rarely work to forward the co-operation that would be in the lasting interest of all their members.
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Just as significant is the growing co-operation between Serbian and Albanian mafias, which overlap with their political classes.
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Australia is doing better than Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development averages for life expectancy and infant mortality.
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The two countries pledged deeper co-operation during the visit of China's leader Xi Jinping to Warsaw in June.
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The two countries established a new high-level diplomatic dialogue last year and have increased their military co-operation.
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As a former home secretary, Mrs May is acutely aware of the value of security co-operation in Europe.
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If the deal holds where others have failed, then deeper co-operation between Russia and America can be expected.
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People in the industry reckon that a withdrawal of British co-operation could at least slow down the project.
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In February Mike Pompeo, America's secretary of state, threatened to limit co-operation with countries that used Huawei gear.
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The African Renaissance and International Co-Operation Fund has also given around $9 million to the project so far.
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"Amiens was symbolic of the Entente Cordiale, the co-operation without which victory was impossible," Britain's Prince William said.
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International co-operation is no longer just about agreements between governments: it is also about people building shared values.
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Heavy-handed interference will alienate communities whose co-operation is needed to identify potential terrorists and abusers among them.
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Irish and EU officials are studying existing areas of all-island co-operation, such as electricity, as possible models.
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The partnership's purpose is to increase both economic and governmental compatibility and co-operation with the EU's eastern neighbours.
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The state suspended co-operation with the network (not that it was terribly co-operative in the first place).
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In the West co-operation between tech firms and carmakers is wary; neither wants to give too much away.
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Its new "Permanent Structured Co-operation" provides a framework for mutual defence and inspires talk of a "European army".
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As recent events in north Africa show, however, this co-operation quickly ends where it collides with national impulses.
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According to Eliezer Papo of Ben Gurion University, academic co-operation, which used to be "non-existent" has exploded.
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A cut in global growth forecasts by the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development rattled risk appetite further.
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If left unchecked, they could disrupt market rules, poison business co-operation, and cause instabilities in the world economy.
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The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said on Monday that the elections respected fundamental freedoms.
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The problem with the EU is not that it's about co-operation, but that it's so rubbish at it.
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It is true that its neighbours are gradually stepping up security co-operation with each other and with America.
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The tension is exacerbated by the KDP's co-operation with Turkey, home to a large and restive Kurdish population.
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New technologies that encourage co-operation in some spheres of life contribute to social capital rather than weaken it.
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But Bishop Ma's renunciation of the Chinese church at his consecration ceremony had caused co-operation to break down.
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These friendships have enabled us to use our good offices to promote dialogue and co-operation regionally and globally.
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The nation has the fastest-rising average age among the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries.
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Only by remaining relentlessly focused on co-operation with all states will we ensure a Great Gain for all.
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Israel's emerging allies in Africa and Latin America see a vibrant high-tech sector and useful military co-operation.
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Embryonic schemes include PESCO (Permanent Structured Co-operation), EDF (a European Defence Fund) and E2I (a European Intervention Initiative).
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In an interview with the Financial Times, Gates argues that Apple's co-operation would not set a meaningful precedent.
|
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And despite signs of co-operation, some analysts say China's muscle-flexing is making business harder for Japanese companies.
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It also says it wants to expand its co-operation efforts and partnerships — presumably with organizations such as BSR.
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Monetary policy coordination and the goal of a common currency across the Gulf Co-operation Council would likely collapse.
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The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe said the election was characterized by xenophobic and intimidating messages.
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According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the US has 2.8 hospital beds per 1,000 people.
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has been trying to coordinate global efforts to combat tax evasion.
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Kim Scheppele, a political scientist at Princeton University, notes the cunning deniability of the "system of national co-operation".
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But a U.S. prosecutor said last month Andrew had provided "zero co-operation" to the investigation into Epstein's activities.
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Elsewhere, Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron met to agree on moves regarding counter-terrorism and defense co-operation Thursday.
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According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the U.S. ranks fifth in adult education levels.
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Indeed, despite tough international sanctions on the North, the two Koreas have already started preparing for closer economic co-operation.
|
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A global carbon price would produce far greater economic benefits than border taxes, but would require closer international co-operation.
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The two leaders' personal relationship may be flourishing, but the partnership rests largely on military co-operation and political alignment.
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MANY articles in The Economist cite reports or statistics from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development or OECD.
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The aim is to foster cross-party co-operation on specific issues that are chosen and funded by the public.
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The other route to co-operation is reciprocal altruism of the "you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours" variety.
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CAATSA sanctions could affect other areas of defence co-operation and arms development, says Arda Mevlutoglu, a defence-policy expert.
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The Emirati Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation has denied Hedges was given documents he did not understand.
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He set down a template for co-operation in Europe for the sake of peace, rule of law and democracy.
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Illinois has introduced a bill restricting co-operation with federal immigration officials—as have California, Maryland, Nevada and New York.
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But it will come to nothing unless co-operation is put at the heart of relations between the two countries.
|
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Merkel, meanwhile, said OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) nations wanted a solution to digital taxation by 2020.
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Weeks later the Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Co-operation held a peace conference with clerics from dozens of countries.
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Observers assumed that greater co-operation, and a full rapprochement with Djibouti, would have to precede the lifting of sanctions.
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They rely on the co-operation of local governments, to gain access to the entire process, including the voters' register.
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America and other NATO members rely on Turkish co-operation in Syria's civil war and the fight against Islamic State.
|
|
"Connectivity" is a buzzword for the government, which recently hosted a conference on improving regional infrastructure and economic co-operation.
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|
"I have no knowledge regarding any planned capital co-operation between LOT and Air China," Adrian Kubicki, LOT spokesman said.
|
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The possibility of long-term co-operation between the two countries to support oil prices also has a defensive logic.
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CHRIS PERRYEmeritus editor-in-chiefAgricultural Water ManagementLondon Water is far more likely to induce co-operation than conflict between countries.
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The agreement follows a memorandum of understanding between both companies in April 2017 on LNG bunkering co-operation in Singapore.
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But even as the strategic co-operation between the two countries deepens, the row over trade is gathering strength, too.
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There are strong commercial incentives for publishers to cater to the six members of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC).
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Crop-substitution, which under the agreement should be done in co-operation with farmers, must be "mandatory", Mr Duque says.
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The Elysée Treaty of 1963, the basis for Franco-German co-operation, would be given a fresh lick of paint.
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South Korea's president, Moon Jae-in, is offering to invest in the North's railways and to promote economic co-operation.
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The government, which claims to be pro-Western and in favour of co-operation with NATO, insisted on its choice.
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Colombia needs to rethink security policy for a post-FARC era, with greater use of intelligence and civilian co-operation.
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The Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) on Tuesday revised down its global growth forecast for the year.
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The Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) on Tuesday revised down its global growth forecast for the year.
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Even so, some analysts warn against antagonising China just when America needs its co-operation on North Korea's nuclear programme.
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The Chinese kindergarten, Ms Chu found, had little trouble securing co-operation and compliance from the children and their parents.
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The home affairs committee similarly says more time is needed to ensure continuing co-operation on justice and domestic security.
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ONE question confronting Britain and the European Union is how to maintain foreign-policy and security co-operation after Brexit.
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China has stressed that its participation in Chile is strictly focused on Asia-Pacific co-operation, not joining the TPP.
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We've asked the Trust to commit to making changes that will address those shortcomings, and their co-operation is welcome.
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The Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) recommend a target of 70 percent of one's pre-retirement income.
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Holtse added that Maersk, which is the world's largest container shipping company, had provided full co-operation throughout the investigation.
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And until recently Turkey had suspended security co-operation with France, out of pique over French statements on Armenian genocide.
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The hard truth is that voters put jobs, investment and counter-terrorist co-operation before the welfare of Russian dissidents.
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He said international co-operation had almost succeeded in wiping out polio which remains endemic only in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
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"The world today faces many major problems that require close co-operation between China and the United States," Wang said.
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A source close to the Turkish army says "no intelligence or military co-operation" took place between America and Turkey.
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Such intimate co-operation between police and private firms is less common elsewhere in Europe but is on the rise.
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Rouhani warned on Wednesday that Iran could reduce its co-operation with the U.N. nuclear watchdog if the deal collapses.
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Ghanian President Nana Akufo-Addo pinpointed China's development story Saturday in a speech that promoted intra-African economic co-operation.
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But punishing relatively innocuous returnees harshly has the downside of alienating other Muslims, and can damage anti-terrorism co-operation.
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|
Lavrov was in Hamburg for a meeting of the 57-nation Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).
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Nine other countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have announced future corporate tax rate reductions.
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Mexico has the fewest retirement-age citizens among nations belonging to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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Rose also noted that after the government relaxed competition rules there was "enormous" co-operation between all retailers at present.
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But even without co-operation with these bigger banks, we can still build channels of financial settlement with smaller banks.
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Mexico has the fewest retirement-age citizens among nations belonging to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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If providing that co-operation means risking established business with bigger, better incumbents, it is unlikely to be completely forthcoming.
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Democrats are more economically nationalistic than they used to be, but still mindful of the value of global co-operation.
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Didi said it had reached an agreement with the collapsed bike-sharing firm on "co-operation arrangements" for its business.
|
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South Korea's air quality is the worst of any country in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
|
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And it delivers an important message about the public's interest in co-operation among MPs to the government of the day.
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|
One thing that slowed the flow of refugees from Central America over the past few years was co-operation from Mexico.
|
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Britain might seek to exploit this by offering sweeteners: defence co-operation with the Baltics, perhaps, or infrastructure grants to Poland.
|
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The state-controlled oil giant had claimed that the measures violated a 1994 co-operation agreement between the EU and Russia.
|
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In January when Australia's prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, visited Japan, the two countries pledged to deepen and broaden defence co-operation.
|
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In 2014 the finance ministry said co-operation between the supervision and enforcement functions would likely be imperilled by institutional separation.
|
|
We believe that stronger pharmaceutical trade co-operation will contribute to the well being of the people in our two countries.
|
|
The EPAs were promoted as a new breed of trade deal, and were supposed to bring development and regional co-operation.
|
|
But congressional co-operation might help Mr Bolsonaro subvert democratic institutions and norms in other ways, such as encouraging police brutality.
|
|
To win their co-operation he sent more money and gave them licence to behave more or less as they wished.
|
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Farther afield, there is barely concealed close co-operation with the Sunni Gulf states on resisting Iran's influence in the region.
|
|
We also want tax reform and I'm glad the OECD [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] is looking at this.
|
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Even in countries where De Beers does not have a joint venture with the government, it depends on local co-operation.
|
|
One barrier to co-operation used to involve fears about Chinese migrants overrunning the Far East, where just 6m Russians live.
|
|
Vital economic ties depend on good neighbourliness, as does co-operation on sensitive topics from controlling immigration to combating drugs-trafficking.
|
|
They have maintained close communications in order to manage their differences properly, enhance mutual trust and engage in maritime co-operation.
|
|
South Korea, for its part, may devise workarounds that allow a degree of economic co-operation before any sanctions are lifted.
|
|
Researchers analyzed data from 23 to 2000 from the World Health Organization and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
Wherever they can be found, they are still teaching children to read, to count, and to appreciate co-operation and kindness.
|
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" ANGEL GURRIA, SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE ORGANISATION FOR ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT: "Britain, look at yourself in the mirror, naked.
|
|
Outside of the Cuf Co-operation Council, all oil producers have always produced every barrel they can and always will do.
|
|
Officials speak of turning the model of co-operation embodied in the Elysée treaty into a platform for Franco-German "convergence".
|
|
They are interested in co-operation with the United States against organised crime, but will resist automatic alignment with Mr Trump.
|
|
Mr Trump has already spurred some gentle defence co-operation inside the EU; it can be stepped up without undermining NATO.
|
|
In 2011 the six-member Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) handed over $5bn to help the king weather the Arab Spring.
|
|
Encouraged by this discovery, Dr Haussler and his colleagues performed one further test, with the co-operation of real human beings.
|
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The Arctic Council refers to an intergovernmental forum which aims to promote co-operation, co-ordination and interaction among Arctic states.
|
|
The Gulf Co-operation Council summit in Kuwait, scheduled for two days, lasted hardly 15 minutes before breaking up in acrimony.
|
|
Mr Bolsonaro will need the co-operation of congress to revamp the tax system and reduce the public-sector wage bill.
|
|
But monitors from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe said the poll showed "scant respect for democratic standards".
|
|
Therefore, The Economist is cherry-picking to distort Turkey's international co-operation efforts on the issues of torture and ill treatment.
|
|
The sanctions that sparked this exchange of rhetorical fire were a rare example of co-operation between China, America and Russia.
|
|
The enduring and vigorous friendship between China and Africa is rooted in equality, sincerity, win-win co-operation and common development.
|
|
This co-operation represents a major step forward for relations between the two countries, which haven't had official talks since 2015.
|
|
Mexico's overall tax take is the lowest out of 36 nations in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
|
|
Workers are rated across five areas — punctuality, presentation, co-operation, communication, and quality of work, in addition to short written feedback.
|
|
"The United States, Russia and China know that without Pakistan's co-operation, there can be no settlement in Afghanistan," Sheikh said.
|
|
Just as rich, but sometimes overlooked, are the complexities of British and American military co-operation during the second world war.
|
|
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) says Germany has the second-highest tax burden of all industrialized countries.
|
|
The Republicans' central database, now called "GOP Data Center", has commanded less co-operation and has often been neglected between campaigns.
|
|
There are also ever more ways of organising co-operation; Wikipedia has already produced the world's biggest encyclopaedia by using volunteers.
|
|
Similar arrangements hold in the other countries of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), a six-member club of oil monarchies.
|
|
The first will be a joint statement from him and his EU counterparts on hybrid, maritime, and cyber-security co-operation.
|
|
Both categories are set by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), of which China is not a member.
|
|
According to the Israeli officials, co-operation with Egypt and Jordan, with which Israel has signed peace treaties, is even better.
|
|
Mr Yasay added that the Philippines would stick to a military pact with America called the Enhanced Defence Co-operation Agreement.
|
|
The Brexit vote in the UK was a rebellion against international co-operation, with the loss of local sovereignty that implies.
|
|
This stress on peace, dialogue and international co-operation has defined our foreign policy and place in the world ever since.
|
|
This would be consistent with the so-called "Pillar 85033" of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's ongoing work.
|
|
"We believe the solution to more secure networks lies in co-operation across the whole industry," he said in a statement.
|
|
The areas of potential co-operation include mobility programs, product development, distribution within India and global emerging markets among other things.
|
|
She added that it was very important to keep good co-operation with the United States in the area of security.
|
|
He wants to drop promises to maintain a level playing field for regulations and distance Britain from future defence co-operation.
|
|
A senior official says co-operation among destination countries started well, but in the past four months it has moved backwards.
|
|
The IMF again downgraded its growth forecasts amid "uncertainty about the future of the global trading system and international co-operation".
|
|
"The agreement should include provisions on good regulatory practice and regulatory co-operation, in relation to business activities," the document said.
|
|
Events like Gray's death shake community trust—meaning that co-operation with police investigations and even reporting of criminal offences drops.
|
|
Our relationship with Japan is stronger than ever, and this visit will enhance co-operation in a wide range of areas.
|
|
" Not to be outdone, Chinese President Xi Jinping dubbed the launch "the start of a new stage of our co-operation.
|
|
Britain invests less in healthcare than counties like Denmark or Belgium, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
As long as realising the benefits of new technologies requires close co-operation with leading tech firms, this is unlikely to change.
|
|
It is also working on the first co-operation outside Austria, with a plan to scale to other European markets in time.
|
|
The best chance for the PRD's economy of upgrading for the future lies in co-operation between the governments of the region.
|
|
Such co-operation has helped convict predators, including a lorry driver's mate who killed a sex worker in the zone in 2015.
|
|
If work in future will increasingly be done by contractors and freelancers, that capacity for co-operation will become even more important.
|
|
Souq, which anyway ships mostly to the six countries in the Gulf Co-operation Council, a customs union, is the rare exception.
|
|
"Efforts on gender equality are very timely," said Shin Eun-kyung, an economist with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
Nearly a third of Australia's resident population were born overseas, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, or OECD.
|
|
It has stepped up military co-operation with Serbia, and may have been involved in a recent alleged coup attempt in Montenegro.
|
|
Without progress to a state, the PA cannot maintain security co-operation with Israel for ever; nor can it regain its credibility.
|
|
With our region steadily moving into the European Union we reversed that lack of co-operation, military build-up and ethnic tensions.
|
|
The feud has hit military co-operation, with America pulling out of drills with its Gulf allies last October to encourage "inclusiveness".
|
|
But it must also have required extensive co-operation, so that those noisily crafting the tools would not be eaten by predators.
|
|
The DoJ's investigation of Odebrecht and Braskem suggests that its co-operation with authorities in other countries has stepped up a gear.
|
|
The key to controlling Democratic Centre is co-operation with Álvaro Uribe, a former president who has been Mr Duque's political patron.
|
|
Despite its fiscal woes the government remains committed to hosting next year's Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit for the first time.
|
|
Co-operation on policing and security in Europe depends on a legal framework that will not apply in a no-deal world.
|
|
But sceptics wonder how possible it is for even a well-intentioned firm to avoid forced co-operation with the Chinese government.
|
|
Greater legal certainty, less confrontation and more co-operation between governments and firms will not drive jihadist propaganda off the internet altogether.
|
|
And European defence co-operation makes little sense without Britain, the biggest spender and one of Europe's only two global military powers.
|
|
The Conservatives see the offer as a sign that, despite Brexit, co-operation between Britain and European countries is stronger than ever.
|
|
That's prompted the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, a Paris-based think tank, to raise its global economic forecast Tuesday.
|
|
He may be unable to throw his weight around much without Mr Kabila's co-operation, since Mr Kabila's party dominates the legislature.
|
|
Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Emmanuel Macron met at Aachen to sign a new treaty of co-operation between Germany and France.
|
|
One would be to assure India of further intelligence co-operation and defence assistance should it restrain itself from more muscle-flexing.
|
|
There are a lot of public policy issues in tech, but many can be solved by co-operation between industry and governments.
|
|
Closer defence and security co-operation (France is trying to cut spending, Germany has committed to spending billions more) will come easily.
|
|
Founder Eugene Kaspersky added that the company has been "forced to freeze" its co-operation as a result of the parliament's vote.
|
|
Schetyna added he had received a promise that the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) would monitor any recount.
|
|
Clark understood that the life he liked depended on close co-operation with the governing classes, but he could also despise them.
|
|
The company encourages co-operation by allowing people to join together under the same organisational roof, regardless of race, creed or nationality.
|
|
It is obvious to anyone who sees the direction of our technological civilisation that we need more international co-operation, not less.
|
|
The 34 nations in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development average a 25 percent rate, according to the Tax Foundation.
|
|
A spokesman for the Interior Ministry said co-operation between Facebook and the BKA federal police agency and the BfV was good.
|
|
That is true of David Cameron, whose appreciation and sensitivity for continental co-operation grew during his recent "renegotiation" of Britain's membership.
|
|
The organisation's work in Afghanistan started in 2006, initiated by Prince Charles and in co-operation with Afghanistan's then-President Hamid Karzai.
|
|
In the wake of Jabhat al-Nusra's dissociation from al-Qaeda, some opposition groups had scheduled talks for more formal co-operation.
|
|
Then of course there are the future benefits as we deepen co-operation in terms of free trade in areas like services.
|
|
"We pledge that this co-operation must and will be developed, now and after the United Kingdom leaves the EU," they added.
|
|
"Nonetheless, I see not much chance for a co-operation on a party level or in a joint parliamentary group," Gulyas said.
|
|
The co-operation of AMI will make it harder for President Trump to argue that Cohen was acting as a rogue operator.
|
|
"International co-operation cannot be dictated by fits of anger and throwaway remarks," a representative for French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters.
|
|
Washington, the EU, the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development have nothing to say about that.
|
|
According to a recent Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development analysis, we spend more than $10,300 per capita on health care.
|
|
Meanwhile, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development puts the number at closer to 14 percent of jobs in developed economies.
|
|
The Swiss-Liechtenstein agreement is under a global tax sharing initiative spearheaded by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
|
|
A testament to ingenuity, technology and global co-operation, the International Space Station makes 2000 orbits of the earth in 235 hours.
|
|
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, in a 2015 report, recommended countries address tax challenges that the digital economy brings.
|
|
That is eight percentage points above the average of the industrialized member nations of the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development.
|
|
In broad terms, Singapore Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen confirmed accelerated co-operation among partners, but he also said he welcomed Mattis' reassurances.
|
|
The first is growing military co-operation between China and Russia, which appear to have been conducting a joint patrol around South Korea.
|
|
Chris Weidman and Johny Hendricks are two former champions whose records before and after USADA / UFC co-operation read like night and day.
|
|
And research by the Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development said food preparation faced the highest probability of automation among 88 industries.
|
|
"I think the lesson that can be drawn is that we must continue co-operation with Britain – Brexit or no Brexit," he added.
|
|
Because habits of co-operation that were decades in the making cannot easily be put back together again, the harm would be lasting.
|
|
In 1990, 12 developed countries -- including Germany, France, Denmark, Sweden -- in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development had net wealth taxes.
|
|
They are also a case of co-operation: since their software is open-source, developers can easily learn and copy from each other.
|
|
Even before suspending the PMDA, Russia had eroded the spirit of nuclear co-operation that prevailed after the end of the cold war.
|
|
They are the antidote to the loss of trust in institutions of all kinds, and the loss of faith in global co-operation.
|
|
Broad social-democrat parties built structures for co-operation between capital and labour that still underpin globally competitive economies like the Scandinavian ones.
|
|
A win by Mr Macron will strengthen the EU's resolve, and may revive the Franco-German co-operation that has often powered it.
|
|
It was a political move aimed at Saudi Arabia, the most influential member of both OPEC and the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC).
|
|
Earlier this month the two countries reopened the liaison office in the Kaesong industrial complex, the site of their deepest economic co-operation.
|
|
"The new co-operation we're announcing today will be an important contributor to the success of the scheme," said FCA boss Andrew Bailey.
|
|
In a meeting with Mr Abdul-Mahdi (at the prime minister's office) he discussed continuing America's co-operation with the Iraqi security forces.
|
|
Europeans and other world powers believe that it was only the narrowness of the original deal that secured Iranian co-operation in 2015.
|
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In return, America may offer support for partial or temporary sanctions relief, possibly tailored to allow economic co-operation between the two Koreas.
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True, the EU has begun a conversation on defence co-operation, and Mr Abe wants to remove the pacifist clause from Japan's constitution.
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And the best way to foster such co-operation is to ease the movement of ideas, goods, money and people across the globe.
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Global trade flows are sluggish and should be double their present levels, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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Mike Pompeo, America's secretary of state, has threatened to withhold intelligence co-operation from anyone who uses the firm's gear in "critical" networks.
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"The new co-operation we're announcing today will be an important contributor to the success of the scheme," FCA boss Andrew Bailey said.
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Mr Orban's thumping victory was overshadowed by strong criticism from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which had deployed observers.
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Potter, who did not mention the Bangladesh incident specifically, said "response regimes" need improvement and that co-operation was more important than ever.
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According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the United States had the highest per-capita pharmaceutical spending in 2015.
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The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development estimates that there are about 700 million metric tons of excess steel capacity globally today.
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Turkey, which regards the group as a front for the PKK, wants America to suspend its co-operation with the militia in Syria.
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"But I am sure that it will not make our co-operation impossible, neither on the bilateral and the V4 levels," Ader added.
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Detectives investigating a spate of murders in Prato's Chinatown in 2010 complained of a total lack of co-operation from the Chinese community.
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Oki Matsumoto, founder and chairman of Monex, said increased co-operation could be a win-win for both retail investors and institutional activists.
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That is an exaggeration, but it would threaten European co-operation in other areas and knock back a club already beset by crises.
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The person said, "Paul came seeking co-operation for concrete projects", and would be returning to China within a month for further talks.
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"The IOC remains fully committed to clarifying this situation, working in co-operation with the (French) prosecutor," the organization said in a statement.
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The IAEA received minimal co-operation in preparing its report, published in early December, on the possible military dimensions of Iran's nuclear programme.
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In a 2014 study, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said intermediaries were involved in three out of four bribery cases.
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Konrad Szymanski, the deputy foreign minister for European affairs, says Poland now plans to beef up its co-operation with the Visegrad group.
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Indian and Nepalese police are getting better at working together, but they are still getting limited co-operation from China, says Ms Banks.
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The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe still records hundreds or thousands of ceasefire violations weekly, mostly from the separatist side.
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It does not allow Ukrainians to work in the EU. It refers to political and military co-operation, but without NATO-like obligations.
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By 2021, Kuczynski said Peru would be a member of the developed-nation club the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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The U.S. and Mexico are the world's most obese countries, according to a report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
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The blockade is also weakening the six-country Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), of which Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are members.
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Condemnation of the list followed from organizations including the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and the Committee to Protect Journalists.
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Duterte is due to meet US President Donald Trump who arrived in Vietnam Friday for the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) summit.
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Brazil's tax burden of 33.4 percent is already the highest in Latin America, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development on Monday lowered its forecast for global growth this year to 2.4%, from 2.9% previously.
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It would help if there were a global standard for cross-border co-operation in such cases, but that seems some way off.
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Plato Partnership, which includes Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, AXA Investment Managers and Franklin Templeton, said it had signed the co-operation agreement with Turquoise.
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The Organization of Economic Co-Operation and Development, an intergovernmental economic group, just slashed its forecast for global growth to a decade low.
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Berlin-based Germania focuses on Europe, North Africa and the Middle East and recently announced a co-operation with Spanish carrier Air Europa.
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Sharp has been deepening co-operation with its parent Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer, while cutting costs and consolidating production lines.
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Today they exist in complacent isolation, and can only be rescued from it by the conscious co-operation and collaboration of all craftsmen.
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Despite public talk of unity, the huge task was about to expose fractures in Franco-German co-operation that sparked an industrial meltdown.
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Gates' co-operation has increased pressure on Manafort to likewise flip and provide Mueller with information on Trump and other senior campaign aides.
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Instead, Britain would seek a shallower trade deal, including elements of security and judicial co-operation but with less privileged access to Europe's markets.
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With Donald Trump pushing for America First, China has rushed to fill the void and cast itself as the guardian of international co-operation.
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Data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development shows that South Koreans on average work more than workers in any other country.
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Cryptocurrency operators have drawn a new optimism from Choe's comments, seeing them clearly indicating the government's co-operation in their plans for self-regulation.
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Co-operation between governments could help; co-ordinated macroprudential measures would reduce the risk that some countries face an unmanageable fire-hose of money.
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EU help is also important in encouraging regional co-operation between the British territories and their neighbours on issues such as mitigating climate change.
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But given the wrongdoing the deferred prosecution agreement outlines, the firm got off lightly (the co-operation of the company's more recent management helped).
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The West Midlands was late to put forward a devolution bid and some thought the political diversity of the region might scupper co-operation.
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Intelligence work, and especially co-operation with agencies from other countries, including the British, has helped the French thwart a number of planned attacks.
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Now there is trade, people-to-people cultural activities, co-operation in areas of infrastructure, energy and education that give meaning to our region.
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It will include positive messages about future co-operation on security, defence and foreign policy, within the framework of an over-arching association agreement.
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Last year Harmony ended its co-operation with United Russia, Vladimir Putin's party, and joined the Socialists and Democrats group in the European Parliament.
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All of this aligns her with aspects of the AfD, whose leader, Alexander Gauland, has praised her and said he wants closer co-operation.
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Franco-German comity should help EU governments find common ground on defence co-operation, the focus of their efforts over the next few months.
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Prices are up from $26 in 2016 to over $70 mainly because of Venezuela's meltdown and better co-operation between Saudi Arabia and Russia.
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Nearly half of the world's jobs face some risk of being automated, according to research by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
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That's the kernel of a highly technical debate going on between 130 countries via the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
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Trading arrangements, a new migration regime, the future of regulation, security and defence co-operation, money and much else will be on the table.
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But a new report from the intergovernmental Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development warns that automation and robots are far from a panacea.
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Mr Aquino also signed an Enhanced Defence Co-operation Agreement (EDCA) with America, which lets American troops operate out of five Philippine military bases.
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Their aim was to work out how to continue their fruitful co-operation beyond the peace talks and promote internationalist values in their countries.
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China has stressed that a high-level official at the opening would jeopardise talks on trade as well as co-operation over North Korea.
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In part that is because rivals embark on top-down projects, whereas Dubai has tended to develop ideas in close co-operation with businesses.
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This week the government published two new papers that concern the court: one on civil-justice co-operation and the other on dispute resolution.
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For civil and commercial cases, the government refers favourably to the Lugano convention, which governs judicial co-operation between the EU and EFTA countries.
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This, along with the prime minister's co-operation with Orthodox Jewish parties, has alienated those American Jews who identify with the opposition in Israel.
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The French minister of foreign affairs appointed an "ambassador for migration", who will foster co-operation with migrants' countries of origin and of transit.
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This time monitors from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) noted that the election showed "scant respect for democratic standards".
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Weather prediction represents "a last bastion of international co-operation", a global effort to warn of natural disasters that ravage crops and displace communities.
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The government has just published its own plan, for a new treaty with the EU that essentially retains the current system of co-operation.
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The special relationship was reinforced again with the co-operation of Prime Minister Tony Blair and President George W. Bush over the Iraq War.
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But greater co-operation with Russia, which has shown little inclination to get rid of its ally in Damascus, may only cement his rule.
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Arab governments have other worries, and often value Israeli trade and security co-operation much more than paying lip service to the Palestinian cause.
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The hope is that the project will catch the attention of the United Nations, which promotes international co-operation, at a meeting in September.
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The spokesman also made a point of flagging how the latter has been called out for a lack of co-operation by security agencies.
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The new entrants need not only their customers' permission to take money and data from their accounts but also co-operation from their banks.
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By contrast, he says, the Palestinian Authority's security co-operation with Israel in the West Bank has led only to the expansion of settlements.
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Its voters have learned that economic battles are reliant on European debates, and that European co-operation is not in itself a bad thing.
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Increasingly, China is trying to use Interpol, an international body for police co-operation, to give its cross-border forays a veneer of respectability.
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The Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development cut forecasts again for the global economy in 825.33 and 2020 cascading concerns on global growth.
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Geert-Hinrich Ahrens, leading a delegation of election observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, expressed concern about electoral transparency.
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Meanwhile, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), forecast that Brexit will cut UK GDP growth from 2% to 1% next year.
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The "new Seven Sisters" of oil are considered the most influential firms from countries outside the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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They discussed "opportunities for obtaining data, co-operation and information-sharing in light of the 'Panama Papers' revelations," the OECD said in a statement.
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Hardly. America ranked 13 out of 34 Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development member countries for total tax revenue per capita in 2014.
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Hardly. America ranked 17th out of 34 Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development member countries for total tax revenue per capita in 2014.
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said in May that plastic recycling around the world is "failing to reach its full potential".
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Both the British and Russian governments helped bring the series to life, an increasingly rare display of diplomatic co-operation between the two countries.
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American generals and admirals are exploring or deepening military co-operation with such countries as the Philippines, Vietnam and even Malaysia, long a critic.
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LONDON (Reuters) - A no-deal Brexit would jeopardize security co-operation with the European Union, Britain's security minister Ben Wallace will say on Thursday.
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This is both encouraging closer co-operation among neighbours and driving them closer to external powers including India, Australia, Japan and, above all, America.
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He also talked of retaining as much of the status quo as possible, not least in areas like security and foreign-policy co-operation.
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"This isn't simply a matter of luck—it's primarily about the good co-operation of the security services in our country," Mr Mayer says.
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Campaigners are hoping for progress on corporate transparency, disclosure of payments in oil, gas and mining, and co-operation in cross-border corruption cases.
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American and Russia co-operation rests largely on the relationship between John Kerry, the current secretary of state, and his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov.
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Helping create the environment which will make greater co-operation possible is one of our top priorities for our time on the Security Council.
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We've had 20 years of peace in Ireland, increased North-South co-operation, and the foundation for all of that was the European Union.
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Co-operation and co-creation isn't enoughThe expert also proposed a new way of making decisions, where responsibility and decisions are taken together.3.
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They said they would prefer to be subject to international reforms currently being considered by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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Information sharing between law enforcement in both countries has led to increased co-operation on identifying criminal operations effecting the United States and Mexico.
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According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's global outlook this week, British economic growth will slow to 1 percent next year.
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The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) called the election "competitive" and applauded voters' record turnout and "broad choice" of candidates.
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said on Tuesday this was a "major financial stability risk" — a starker assessment than the BoE's.
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"If Britain's openness is a condition for bilateral co-operation, then mutual trust is the very foundation on which this is built," said Liu.
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The MRC is meant to facilitate co-operation among the countries that share the watershed; China and Myanmar have the status of "dialogue partners".
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The French government is also working on ideas to breathe life into the European project that will focus on defence and security co-operation.
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Corporate debt stood at a record $13.9 trillion at the end of 2019, data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development showed.
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Almost half of South Korean baby boomers live in poverty - the highest among members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
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The subtle workings of the "system of national co-operation" are testament to the legal expertise of those who fashioned it, including Mr Orban.
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Switzerland is also among the countries that have signed up to a global initiative led by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
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Zarif said this week that Iran will continue its co-operation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, which conducts inspections of its nuclear activities.
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After the results, Mrs Lam promised to "strengthen co-operation" with the district councils and promised that the government would reflect on its shortcomings.
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Meanwhile, international bodies such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development have been warning of weak global growth in the coming years.
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The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), has responded to Sheremet's assassination by calling for the protection of journalists in Ukraine.
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But in an era when walls are being built rather than borders broken down, this initiative offers an optimistic model for international cultural co-operation.
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Canada and the United States finessed their disagreement in 1988 with a political rather than legal fix, called the Canada-US Arctic Co-operation Agreement.
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The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe said on Sunday the election had been competitive and that fundamental freedoms had been generally respected.
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This growth is predicted to come largely from OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) economies – particularly OECD Europe – following solid performance in 2016.
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According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, handbags are the most counterfeited item on earth, followed by shoes, watches, perfume, and cosmetics.
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The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which oversees the CRS, is worried about the tax-dodging possibilities of residence-for-sale schemes.
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Xi Jinping announced another $60bn in investment and aid to Africa at the triennial meeting of the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation in Beijing.
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"Thanks to the co-operation of the air traffic controllers (Eurocontrol and DFS), it was possible to fly that Christmas tree flight path," they said.
|
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A first for Russia, Mr Putin hosted a lavish summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC), a regional talkfest, in Vladivostok in 2012.
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The Centre Party's ascension became possible only after jettisoning its controversial leader Edgar Savisaar, who had signed a co-operation agreement with Mr Putin's party.
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Quitting the European Union (EU) would be a "tax" on the U.K. economy, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) warned on Wednesday.
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He appears to be relying more on co-operation from the chaebol than on regulation or lawsuits to unravel their complex and opaque ownership structures.
|
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China, Australia and other members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation group, founded in 1992, now account for 72% of its exports (see chart).
|
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One suspects that Mr Trump will not be especially interested in international co-operation to limit tax avoidance or restrain the power of global banks.
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As a minimum it will need close co-operation between the scientists who made them and at least one member of the existing nuclear club.
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Aaron Wolf of Oregon State University and his collaborators have catalogued 2,606 instances of international conflict and co-operation over water between 1948 and 2008.
|
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Mrs Merkel visited Warsaw immediately after Paris on being re-elected chancellor, to stress that new co-operation with France should not marginalise the V4.
|
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Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Secretary General Ángel Gurría was among those voicing relief that the turbulent US campaign would soon be over.
|
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"We are in advanced talks with Jet Airways to see how we can strengthen our co-operation," Air France chief executive Franck Terner told Reuters.
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The co-operation between police, judges, district attorneys, as well as public and private defenders, that such a court needs to get going is rare.
|
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Seven years ago its budget, two-thirds of which was spent on a technical co-operation fund and a youth forum, was around £60m ($78m).
|
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He has also sought to isolate Qatar, a gas-rich neighbour, succeeding only in wrecking the Gulf Co-operation Council and pushing Qatar towards Iran.
|
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Instead, it has divided the Gulf Co-operation Council and caused Qatar to turn for help to Iran, which is gaining influence across the region.
|
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The Organisation of Islamic Co-operation, comprising 57 Muslim countries, called on the world to recognise East Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinian state.
|
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Another 200-odd may still operate on diminished acreages, often in co-operation with black farmers who have been dished out chunks of their land.
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Jamil Zaki: Empathy is our ability to share and understand one another's feelings—a psychological "superglue" that connects people and undergirds co-operation and kindness.
|
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Last year he signed the TRUST act, which bars co-operation between Illinois's police and immigration officials unless a federal judge issues an arrest warrant.
|
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Their option of dual citizenship, the invisible border and growing north-south co-operation, on everything from electricity markets to health care, blunted the distinction.
|
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One, called permanent structured co-operation, or PESCO, aims to attract commitments to projects identified in a Co-ordinated Annual Review on Defence, or CARD.
|
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Increasingly, people wonder whether Mrs May is as committed to the projects or the co-operation with the Chinese that characterised the Cameron-Osborne era.
|
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Last week, the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) projected Italy to contract by 0.3% in 2019, a sizable cut from current forecasts.
|
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The Mount Kumgang tourist region was the site of early co-operation between the two Koreas during a period of detente in the early 2000s.
|
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After a spat over access to the president, he threatened to break off co-operation, saying he expected his media outlets to be "treated differently".
|
|
After a burst of bipartisan co-operation last year, including the overdue passage of a federal budget, he can expect little additional help from Congress.
|
|
Trump also said he supported Brazil's efforts to join the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), a club of the world's advanced economies.
|
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Meanwhile, the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation & Development cut forecasts again for the global economy in 2019 and 2020, citing trade rows and Brexit uncertainty.
|
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Furthermore, the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation & Development cut forecasts again for the global economy in 2000 and 2020, citing trade rows and Brexit uncertainty.
|
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Its power to inform and to lead astray, to entertain and to annoy, to build co-operation or destroy a reputation, makes language serious stuff.
|
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"Downstream we can do many things" in co-operation with the UN and other Iraqi ministries, says Mehdi Rasheed of Iraq's water ministry in Baghdad.
|
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But a no-deal Brexit would be a step back for security co-operation compared to Prime Minister Theresa May's proposed accord, Wallace will say.
|
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Oil is central to the six Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) states, which have used the windfall of the past few years to spend lavishly.
|
|
Closing the gender pay gap could swell economies in Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries by 2 trillion dollars, the study found.
|
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Co-operation with the American-based tour seems unlikely, though the European Tour, which is not as wealthy, could be more amenable to a partnership.
|
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A burkini ban would also alienate moderate Muslims, whose co-operation is desperately needed if France is to gather intelligence and foil actual terrorist plots.
|
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The Americans think more NATO-EU co-operation would be nice, but what they really want is for their allies to spend more on defence.
|
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The UK defence ministry has said it is in talks with Germany to sign a new defence co-operation agreement after the country launches Brexit.
|
|
And although Britain's departure removes a brake on European defence co-operation, it also leaves France as the only EU member with any military clout.
|
|
Four of the five (Turkmenistan is the odd man out) are members of the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation, a regional intergovernmental group promoted by China.
|
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But Russia's menacing posture is now driving Finland and Sweden to deepen their military co-operation, and sparking debate in both countries about joining NATO.
|
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Since 1992, the U.S. has fallen from second to tenth in overall research and development, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
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The Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development said Hungary's decision to choose Russian technology was understandable, given Moscow's track record and stable supply chain.
|
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The OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) said Wednesday that it expects the euro area to grow at only 1 percent this year.
|
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The Trilateral Contact Group on Ukraine is preparing a new truce, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said on February 28.
|
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The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development said solid macroeconomic policy and some tax reforms made Colombia "extremely resilient" to the crude price decline.
|
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According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the Japanese Government spends $8,748 per student across all schools and universities every year.
|
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China's crypto initiatives are strategically significant, according to Xiao Wunan, executive vice-chairman of the China-backed Asia Pacific Exchange and Co-operation Foundation (APECF).
|
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Without their co-operation on funeral arrangements it would prove hard to maintain the fiction that Mr Mnangagwa's succession was smooth, rather than a coup.
|
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France has one of the most expensive pension systems in the world, according to data from the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development).
|
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According to data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the UK spends an average of $4,192 per person for a universal system.
|
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Following the Ukraine crisis, NATO decided unanimously to suspend co-operation with the Russian Federation though there have been calls for a rapprochement with Russia.
|
|
While oil demand in the big, developed economies has stalled, consumption is increasing rapidly in countries outside the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
The embargo, imposed in June 2017, has divided families, diverted planes and caused a deep rift in the six-member Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC).
|
|
"Sesame Street" uses skits and songs to introduce little ones to letters and numbers, and well as to concepts like co-operation—and even death.
|
|
Middle-income households are disappearing in developed countries around the world, according to a new report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
|
On the other hand, the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) on Thursday cut its global economic growth forecasts for 9.70.22 and 2020.
|
|
Intermediary cities are growing almost twice as fast as megacities, according to a 2018 paper posted by the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development.bit.
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"Slower demand growth in OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries is not unexpected; it represents a return to the norm," it added.
|
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His much-touted "amnesty" for some criminals appears to include scope for reducing the sentences in exchange for co-operation with authorities and reparations for victims.
|
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In the past, Switzerland would only provide banking information if requested by a limited number of countries and even then, full co-operation was not guaranteed.
|
|
This, Oxfam recommends, can be done by improving co-operation between governments to prevent tax dodging that costs poor countries at least $100 billion a year.
|
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Countries including Australia, Japan, India and Vietnam are quietly stepping up discussions and co-operation, although taking care they do not upset Beijing, the diplomats said.
|
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"We strive to build bridges of co-operation rather than walls of segregation," declared Russell Nelson, a lively 94-year-old, at the gathering in Detroit.
|
|
Euro Style games are a genre of board game which generally emphasize strategy and co-operation over conflict and luck, and often revolve around economic themes.
|
|
Plato Partnership, which includes Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, AXA Investment Managers and Franklin Templeton, said it has signed the co-operation agreement with the LSE unit, Turquoise.
|
|
The withdrawal of the recommendation alone will not cause a lapse of Hammerson's offer or terminate a co-operation agreement between the two companies, Hammerson said.
|
|
About 453% of Japanese women in their prime working years now hold some sort of job, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.
|
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The Palestinian Authority (PA), the limited self-government created under the Oslo Accords of 1993, often threatens to stop security co-operation with the Israeli army.
|
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Reporters asked whether Mr Trump and his team had raised co-operation on climate change or the environment—themes which were prominent during the Obama era.
|
|
"With Comcast basically a 33 percent owner, any major decision when it comes to extension would have to do it with their co-operation," Iger said.
|
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"There is good cause for everyone, also outside of Nordic co-operation, to listen to her and the other voices that are demanding action," he said.
|
|
For example, it is keen to bolster co-operation among members of the so-called Quad, an evolving security partnership between Japan, America, Australia and India.
|
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The best way to soften them may be to stress the case for close co-operation in non-economic areas such as domestic security and defence.
|
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Kiev has refused to do so until shooting stops and international monitors from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) are given access.
|
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That sets the tone for co-operation between Airbus, which represents Germany and Spain in the Eurofighter consortium, and Dassault Aviation, the manufacturer of France's Rafale.
|
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Since the machine is incapable of understanding written instructions, it must learn co-operation purely by watching the actions of its human confrères in the game.
|
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In 2000 when China held its first-ever Forum on China-Africa Co-operation, a summit held every three years, traditional remedies were on the agenda.
|
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During a visit to China last month by Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, the two governments named old-age care as an area for co-operation.
|
|
In theory, the law will help deepen co-operation on security between Japan and America, which had complained about a series of leaks of sensitive information.
|
|
Where its predecessors lauded the merits of co-operation with the emerging superpower, Mr Trump's document promised competition and resistance to Chinese trade and other abuses.
|
|
Metro areas that offer sanctuary to illegal immigrants—as more than three-quarters of those housing most of America's undocumented population do—limit such co-operation.
|
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There will be an offer to Moscow of military co-operation against IS and recognition of Russia's role in deciding the terms of a future settlement.
|
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Military co-operation, too, will become far harder after a no deal—if, for example, Britain finds itself excluded from the EU's Galileo satellite-navigation system.
|
|
Earlier this month she also called for international co-operation to regulate the Internet to — in her words "prevent the spread of extremism and terrorist planning".
|
|
More worrying, says Sophia Besch of the Centre for European Reform, a think-tank, are the implications of going it alone for wider defence co-operation.
|
|
Mutual self-interest will ensure that a high degree of security co-operation between the EU and Britain will continue whatever the outcome of trade negotiations.
|
|
Italian and European co-operation with Libya means that tens of thousands of people are trapped in a country where they face horrific human-rights violations.
|
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Preventing Pakistani nuclear weapons going astray depended on close co-operation with the Pakistani state, notably its army and spy service, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).
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"If we achieve the deal's goals in co-operation with other members of the deal, it will remain in place," said President Hassan Rouhani of Iran.
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At the European Union level, collaborative defence initiatives tend to be bureaucratic (its Permanent Structured Co-operation, or PESCO, is as cumbersome as its name suggests).
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Maintaining America's current levels of border enforcement requires the co-operation of Mexico's government, which Mr Trump's bellicosity does not make more likely to be forthcoming.
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Thailand's alleged co-operation with China could also reflect that the crackdown on free speech in the world's number two economy was spreading to other countries.
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The other part is building closer defence co-operation with its non-NATO neighbour, Finland, as well as with America and Baltic littoral states in NATO.
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Chrystia Freeland (centre), Canada's foreign minister, held up pictures of firefighters from the other NAFTA partners tackling Canadian forest fires as a symbol of co-operation.
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Despite apparent overtures from both sides, there is little serious hope of cross-party co-operation this time, because Democrats would extract too high a price.
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One official even told us that unless the YPG was admitted to the process, it would suspend co-operation on the ground with the United States.
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Back in August of 2014, in co-operation with creative programmer Owen Hindley, the artist converted the building's front wall into a massive game of PONG.
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"We have to think about the future, and co-operation between the Iranian economy and the outside world would be beneficial to us all," he said.
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Japan has exhausted all options to stimulate growth and needs structural reforms, a senior official at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said Friday.
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He is seeking an agreement with prosecutors that would involve his co-operation with the government's criminal fraud probe into 1MDB and Goldman, the report said.
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European Union politicians have celebrated Charlemagne's empire as an early form of transnational co-operation, despite the fact Charlemagne had no "nations" to make co-operate.
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Just as greater European involvement is needed to resolve the migration crisis, so there could be a case for closer European co-operation in cultural matters.
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Speaking at the inaugural edition of that trade fair last year, Mr Xi cast China as a champion of free trade and mutually beneficial co-operation.
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Hawkish members of the Russian elite have seized upon this trend, piling pressure on Mr Putin to give up hopes for co-operation with the west.
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"We've been following Syngenta from shortly after the group was founded, scouting for co-operation projects and joint venture opportunities," said one veteran ChemChina staff member.
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But he said the United States would withdraw all personnel it had dispatched to prepare for military co-operation with Russia under the latest ceasefire agreement.
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On Monday, Morrison announced a new partnership with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development to improve tech company transparency and stop terrorist activity online.
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According to a 40-country annual survey by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the international average workweek was 36.8 hours in 2018.
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The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), which monitored the election, said on Monday its overall assessment was positive, with key procedures followed.
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They noted that several countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development have dropped their wealth taxes because of the challenges posed by collection.
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However, 2023 percent, puts the U.S. below many other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) member countries in terms of women's representation in politics.
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The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which monitors the implementation of the peace agreement, said it had recorded 16,000 ceasefire violations between Dec.
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He now heads Co-operation Ireland, a U.K., Irish and U.S.-registered charity working to promote dialogue and practical collaboration between Irish and Northern Irish communities.
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The world economy is set to grow only 2.4% this year, the lowest since 0.33, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development stated on Monday.
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The UK will immediately lose access to EU databases and other forms of co-operation including the European Arrest Warrant, the Schengen Information System and Europol.
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However, the presentation of the Trump Mideast plan has possibly put a wedge between the Joint List and Blue and White, making co-operation more difficult.
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