Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adverb In a
transnational manner or context.
Etymologies
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Examples
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And also we should question the boundary between IP and other forms of civil/commercial litigation transnationally: IP exceptionalism is common, especially with TM law, and Dinwoodie disagrees with this.
Archive 2009-02-01 Rebecca Tushnet 2009
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Similar to NGOs, most PMSCs operate transnationally and conceive of themselves as apolitical, neutral actors.
David Isenberg: A Rose by any Other Name Would Smell Like a "New Humanitarian" David Isenberg 2010
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Unlike the world's public and private sectors, commoners have deep experience in the safekeeping and supervision of these living systems, both locally and transnationally.
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The broader point here is that the market-based model must be combined with strong and effective government, nationally and transnationally, to deal with critical challenges that markets won't adequately address.
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Reading radical philosophy is but one of numerous activities that can help move the struggle forward; it can help to clarify our understanding of some of the major contradictions that drive capitalism and strengthen our resistance to it, along with helping us to formulate strategies and tactics necessary to engage in effective anti-capitalist work both locally and transnationally.
A Review of Capitalists and Conquerors, and an exchange 2007
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Because they mostly operate transnationally, jurisdiction can become a problem.
Amnesty International: Private Military and Security Companies Wanted for Hire by CIA as "Hitmen"? 2009
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All advertise for others that these children are adopted transnationally.
ONESIES FOR TRANSNATIONALLY ADOPTED INFANTS » Sociological Images 2008
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Companies that operate transnationally often are faced with defining their own internal ethics vis-à-vis differing standards in other countries.
Double Standards 2006
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Companies that operate transnationally often are faced with defining their own internal ethics vis-à-vis differing standards in other countries.
Double Standards 2006
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Foreign fighters and criminals were free to move transnationally with little fear of apprehension.
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