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The phrase "asking for governance" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where someone is requesting or seeking guidance, authority, or management over a particular issue or situation.
Example: "The community is asking for governance to address the ongoing issues related to public safety and resource allocation."
Alternatives: "requesting leadership" or "seeking oversight".
Exact(1)
Spelman encouraged the business community to put sustainability at the heart of their decision-making and drive a green economy, saying: "Companies are asking for governance.
Similar(59)
People are asking for better governance and accountability.
If a huge segment of the Russian business community were to rise up asking for a better governance, more democracy and an effective judiciary, it might pose a true challenge for Mr. Putin's regime.
Mike Milken was Caesar's banker then and tried to dissuade me, but it didn't stop Mike from asking for a corporate governance clause that if Caesar's was acquired, Drexel Burnham would be entitled to a $10 million fee.
Ugandan's are asking for democracy, for better governance, and they need to be able to get it.
It said: "CQC was aware of the service's own reviews following the deaths and, following a meeting with the provider in 2011, we wrote asking for information about their clinical governance and assurance processes with regard to how natural-cause deaths are identified and investigated".
Last year, the Letcher Governance Project ran a campaign asking for economic development ideas that would work in place of a federal prison.
Nevertheless, what I am asking for is a reassessment of the primacy within public schooling of preparing young people for their civic responsibilities and the knowledge of how our system of governance operates.
And Sanford I. Weill, the chairman of Citigroup, was nominated for a public seat, although he withdrew amid criticism just before Mr. Donaldson asked for the review of corporate governance.
This is the logic behind President Bush's promise of a 50% increase in American development aid by 2006, and behind the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), a pan-African initiative that promises better governance and asks for more aid.Some economists, however, have doubts.
But the harshest words came from the Institute of Directors, whose corporate governance director Roger Barker asked "for whom is this institution being run?" after the bank paid out £2.4bn in bonuses but just £860m in dividends to shareholders.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com