Sentence examples for mutually reinforcing effects from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

Site selection, population migration, and the capacity and emissions of incinerators have mutually reinforcing effects that can exacerbate environmental injustice.

Recent modelling suggests that the mutually reinforcing effects of increasing temperatures and aridity, forest fires and deforestation could bring the rainforest far closer than previously thought to "tipping points" at which it becomes ecologically unviable.

Third, if pressures to change are assumed, developing the HR stock relates to the pattern of (strategic) HR policies and practices, particularly in terms of internal alignment and mutually reinforcing effects of such processes, rather than to simply set out some sub-functional activities, such as staffing, training or compensation (Kepes and Delery 2007).

Most other elements have mutually reinforcing effects: (1) information sharing, recognition and participative decision-making; and (2) bottom-up access to management and managers getting involved in the wards.

Similar(56)

"We will implement prudent and responsible macroeconomic policies to ensure mutually reinforcing effect of growth and to maintain economic and financial stability in the region, and prevent negative spillover effect".

This reinforces the reinforcing effects.

Thus, enhanced lymphocytic infiltration and lesion sizes in MS lesions are likely caused by a combination of enhanced responses of astrocytes, microglia, and lymphocytes, which mutually reinforce the effects in individual cell types.

Relative to the case with correct perceptions, assortativity neglect generates two mutually reinforcing departures: A "false consensus effect," whereby agents' perceptions of average characteristics in the population are increasing in their own type; and more "dispersed" behavior in society, which adversely affects welfare due to increased miscoordination.

These health problems were predicted to be interrelated and mutually reinforcing (independently associated) -a "snowball" effect in syndemic theory (as described in Fig.  1).

The effects will be mutually reinforcing, since Britain is also the euro area's biggest market (followed closely by America), buying 16% of the goods and 24% of the services the block exported in 2006, according to Eurostat.

The cumulative effect of these mutually reinforcing mechanisms facilitates forced labour and leads to the dreadful living and working conditions we see in Qatar today.

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