Sentences with phrase «risk irrelevance»

The law must follow other professions and offer the clients a range of services or risk irrelevance.
Without peaceful public acceptance of their decisions, courts risk irrelevance at best and social chaos at worst.»
Musk went on to argue that broad government regulation was vital because companies are currently pressured to pursue advanced AI or risk irrelevance in the marketplace:

Not exact matches

It will take a great deal of courage and not a little imagination to risk failure, powerlessness, and cultural and political irrelevance — to be, in Pope Francis's words, a less «worldly» Church — for the sake of the truth.
Just as the Labour party had to go through a painful exercise of political reinvention in response to social and economic change, so unions must embark on a similar journey or run the risk of continued marginalisation and eventual irrelevance
He also warned that the party risked «receding into irrelevance» if Mr Corbyn won the leadership battle.
«If we don't get this right this year, evaluations risk becoming a highly trumpeted and expensive reform that doesn't help teachers improve their practice and as a result, ultimately fades into irrelevance,» he said.
Recommended reading In the Daily Telegraph, Alastair Sooke laments the closure of Edinburgh's Inverleith House as a dedicated contemporary art gallery, and warns that the city's annual art festival risks slipping into «terminal irrelevance».
Engage with cross-border activity in the ways mentioned above or risk becoming an irrelevance to existing clients as they develop internationally or miss out on international clients entering your market.
These are the signs of a legal education system in the process of breaking down, a subject I canvassed in a recent column for The Lawyers Weekly newspaper: «Law school and the risk of irrelevance
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z