Education was the means by which elites could pacify the people as a collective, rendering them governable through moral suasion. |
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We were supposed to become unthinking, obedient, silent and submissive so as to be governable, exploitable and harmless. |
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The portions of cyberspace that appear to be easily governable are also relatively small. |
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Yet those same technological advances that made nation-states and empires governable now whisk capital and information ungovernably across their frontiers. |
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To what extent is it governable, and how can this be done in a world still made up, politically, of nation states? |
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Ongoing regionalisation is not a matter of choice anymore but is a necessity if the country is to remain governable. |
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But this is just the point: How sincere is this manifest willingness to make a governable country? |
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And finally there is a critically important fourth division that separates countries that are governable from those that are not. |
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Seats very comfortables, brake on all wheels, governable nose wheel, tank reserve of 32 liters, weight 122kg. |
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A deal signed last year under the Saudi aegis between quarrelling Somali factions looked hopeful too, but failed to make the country governable. |
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We end up with shadow networks that make countries ungovernable, or governable by somebody else. |
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It is an important dimension of the person, but it is not easily governable. |
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The Lisbon Strategy is the first link in a chain that should lead to the European economy being governable. |
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According to him, his government had proved that Romania was a governable country where democracy and market economics could coexist. |
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That will be the true test of whether the country is governable. |
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They suggest a governable, controllable world where everyone gets a chance to take part in making the decisions that affect their lives, where policies neatly map out a route for implementation. |
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The threats are numerous, and they range from our welfare state citizens turning into individuals driven by vested interests to the exaggerated development of a world economy that is scarcely governable at the national level. |
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Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the world in which UNESCO is endeavouring to make its voice heard is much less homogeneous and hence much less governable than before. |
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It was governed in so far as it was governable by whichever of two great families happened to be on top, the Sadozais represented at that time by Shah Shuja, and the Barakzais represented by Dost Mohammad. |
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