Dictionary
mobilisation
noun
The act of mobilising
Exact(58)
Mr Schelling concludes that such a world might have a dozen countries with "hair-trigger mobilisation plans to rebuild nuclear weapons and mobilise or commandeer delivery systems".
"The poorer strata of society, if politically mobilised, pose a potential headache for whoever follows Nazarbayev .There are signs that some mobilisation is already happening, under the banner of Islam.
This rapid mobilisation of sorely-needed health professionals begs the question: how can a poor developing country spare qualified, experienced doctors and nurses?
He says he's going to be working hard, seeking a mobilisation of fresh energy.
They receive support from the mobilisation office and from the state and they haven't delivered anything in return.
He says the best way to do this is through mobilisation; helping people who live in informal settlements to articulate their concerns to people in power.
"The western area surge is about massive social mobilisation and massive surveillance.
That means we need ever more grassroots mobilisation like that embodied in 10 10.
It is not on the party's target list, and Coppard has not been given the services of a paid organiser, nor "mobilisation assistants".
Similar(2)
Social-mobilisation researchers have been examining its potential through some unusual, Milgram-like experiments.Technology Quarterly Sweeping below deck A good kind of gas-guzzling Encouraging hydrophobia You, robot?
The "pro-Beijing" group, for its part, has been adopting its opponents' techniques of mass-mobilisation and street protest.
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