[
US
/ˌaɪsəˈɫeɪʃəˌnɪzəm/
]
[ UK /ˌaɪsəlˈeɪʃənˌɪzəm/ ]
[ UK /ˌaɪsəlˈeɪʃənˌɪzəm/ ]
NOUN
- a policy of nonparticipation in international economic and political relations
How To Use isolationism In A Sentence
- Isolationism has a long and respectable pedigree in American history.
- Progress in developing integration across the behavioral sciences can be limited by disinterest, isolationism, and even outright hostility.
- The traditional policy of the Conservative Party to build up a system of economic isolationism within the Empire is inconsistent with world co-operation, and with our obligations under Article VII of the Lease-Lend Agreement. Latest Articles
- I fear that is the other side of America's so-called isolationism; it is an interventionist consequence of isolationism.
- The most effective way of finessing this conflict between isolationism and globalism was to be systematically exploited in the 20th century.
- People misuse the categories of interventionism and isolationism.
- Think of it this way: The old isolationism was a peaceable urge basic to the American people; the new isolationism is little short of a government program to keep the old isolationism, or opposition of any sort to American wars, in check. William J. Astore: The New American Isolationism: The Cost of Turning Away From War's Horrific Realities
- But in a globalized economy, old-fashioned isolationism just isn't tenable.
- If the US can be persuaded to keep supporting global treaties, ministers argue, it will not retreat into dangerous isolationism.
- But you have to distinguish the man from his policies of isolationism and being anticorporate. In Wisconsin, 'Fighting Bob' Fights On