Definition von (organization) im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- org
- Warsaw Treaty Organization
- The strategic alliance of Communist countries (the Soviet Union and its European allies GDR, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Romania and until the 1960s break-up with Moskow Albania) established by the Warshaw Pact (treaty on May 14, 1955)
The Warsaw Treaty Organization claimed it needed to balance the 'threat' posed by NATO, thus justifying the Cold War arms race.
- World Trade Organization
- An international organization designed by its founders to supervise and liberalize international trade
- charitable organization
- An organization with charitable purposes only
- dispute resolution organization
- A business or group that provides alternative dispute resolution services such as conciliation, mediation, arbitration, or negotiation, sometimes as a private alternative to public judicial courts and litigation
The China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Committee (CIETAC) has been designated by CNNIC as the dispute resolution organization .
- front organization
- An organization which secretly acts as the public face of a covert group
- front-organization
- Attributive form of front organization, noun
If we're going to hide effectively, we've got to get rid of this front-organization mentality.
- non-governmental organization
- A legally constituted non-commercial organization created by natural or legal persons with no participation or representation of any government
- non-governmental organization
- An organization that does not receive any money from government. Abbreviated NGO
- organization
- The way in which something is organized, such as a book or an article
The organization of the book is as follows.
- organization
- The quality of being organized
This painting shows little organization at first glance, but little by little the structure becomes clear.
- organization
- A group of people or other legal entities with an explicit purpose and written rules
If you want to be part of this organization, you have to follow its rules.
- organization
- A group of people consciously cooperating
Over time, the spontaneous movement had become an organization.
- organization chart
- A graphic display of reporting relationships in an organization, sometimes displaying position titles and position holders
- organization charts
- plural form of organization chart
- self-organization
- A process of attraction and repulsion in which the internal organization of a system, normally an open system, increases in complexity without being guided or managed by an outside source
- umbrella organization
- An organization that coordinates the activities of a number of member organisations and hence promotes a common purpose
- virtual organization
- An organized entity, whether corporate or charitable, that does not exist in any one, central location, but instead exists solely through the Internet
- organization
- {n} a structure, a formation
- World Intellectual Property Organization
- The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) (French: Organisation mondiale de la propriété intellectuelle or OMPI) is one of the specialized agencies of the United Nations. WIPO was created in 1967 with the stated purpose "to encourage creative activity, [and] to promote the protection of intellectual property throughout the world"
- parachurch organization
- (Din) Parachurch organizations are vehicles by which Christians work collaboratively both outside of and across their denominations to engage with the world in social welfare and evangelism
- umbrella organization
- An umbrella organization is an association of (often related, industry-specific) institutions, who work together formally to coordinate activities or pool resources. In business, political, or other environments, one group, the umbrella organization, provides resources and often an identity to the smaller organizations. Sometimes in this kind of arrangement, the umbrella organization is to some degree responsible for the groups under its care
- virtual organization
- 1. A business which operates primarily via electronic means, virtual business 2. Independent organizations that share resources to achieve their goals, virtual enterprise 3. In grid computing, a VO (Virtual Organization) is a group who shares the same computing resources
- B'Tselem organization
- {i} Israeli organization advocating human rights
- Central Treaty Organization
- originally Middle East Treaty Organization or Baghdad Pact Organization Mutual-security organization, originally composed of Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and Britain. It was formed in 1955, at the urging of the U.S. and Britain, to counter the threat of Soviet expansion into the Middle East. CENTO was never very effective. Iraq withdrew after its anti-Soviet monarchy was overthrown in 1959. In that same year the U.S. became an associate member, and CENTO's headquarters were moved to Ankara, Tur. After the fall of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1979, Iran withdrew and CENTO was dissolved
- Food and Agricultural Organization
- {i} division of the United Nations which deals with food and agriculture, FAO
- Health Maintenance Organization
- {i} heath care program in which one pays a monthly fee and receives health clinic and medical services, type of health insurance plan, HMO
- International Civil Aviation Organization
- U.N. agency which deals with international civil flying issues
- International Labor Organization
- United Nations agency which seeks to improve labor and salary conditions worldwide
- International Labour Organization
- the ILO a UN organization based in Geneva, Switzerland, which helps workers around the world by making sure they are treated fairly, paid equally for the same jobs, not forced to work in dangerous conditions etc. Specialized agency of the United Nations system dedicated to improving labour conditions and living standards throughout the world. Established in 1919 through the Treaty of Versailles as an agency of the League of Nations, the ILO became the first specialized agency affiliated with the UN in 1946. Its activities include compiling labour statistics, protecting international migrants, and safeguarding trade-union rights. Its delegates come from member governments (50%), labour (25%), and employers (25%). About 175 countries are represented in the ILO. It received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1969
- International Organization for Standardization
- Organization for determining standards in most technical and nontechnical fields. Founded in Geneva in 1947, its membership includes more than 100 countries. An appropriate national body represents each country; for example, the U.S. member is the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). Standardization affects units of measurement, alphabetization and transliteration, and specifications for parts, materials, surfaces, processes, tools, methods of testing, and machines. The ISO publishes the results of its work as "International Standards" (IS). ISO standards are optimally reviewed every five years
- International Refugee Organization
- U.N. agency that seeks to aid refugees and displaced people, IRO
- International Refugee Organization
- Temporary specialized agency of the United Nations system (1946-52). The IRO assisted refugees and displaced persons in Europe and Asia who could not or would not return home after World War II. Taking over the work of its principal predecessor, the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, it also assumed responsibility for the legal protection and resettlement of refugees previously carried out by the Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees. It was succeeded by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
- National Military Organization
- {i} Etzel, underground militant group which fought for an independent Jewish state in Israel during the time of the British Mandate
- National Organization for Women
- the full name of now. U.S. women's rights organization. It was founded in 1966 by Betty Friedan to promote equal rights for women, particularly in the area of employment. With some 500,000 members (both women and men) and 550 chapters, it addresses, through lobbying and litigation, issues such as child care, pregnancy leave, and abortion and pension rights. In the 1970s its major concern was passage of the Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution, though the amendment failed in 1982. NOW has been more successful at the state level, where it has lobbied for state equal rights amendments and comparable-worth (equal pay for equal work) legislation
- National Organization of Women
- American feminist organization that promotes gender equality and women's rights, NOW
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- {i} international organization established in 1949 whose members pledged to settle disputes among themselves peacefully and defend one another against outside aggressors, NATO
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- the full name of NATO
- Organization for African Unity
- {i} association of all the African countries which deals with matters concerning this continent
- Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
- U.S. based association that is made up of 42 wealthy countries and is aimed at improving the quality of life within those same countries and aiding developing countries
- Organization of African Unity
- the former name for the African Union. African intergovernmental organization. It was established in 1963 to promote unity and solidarity of African states and eliminate vestiges of colonialism. Membership has varied somewhat over the years because of political disputes. The OAU, whose chief policy unit was the annual assembly of heads of state and government, successfully mediated the Algeria-Morocco dispute of 1964-65 and the Somalia-Ethiopia and Kenya-Somalia border disputes of 1965-67, but it was less successful with the Biafra conflict (1968-70). From the 1970s the OAU has concentrated on economic cooperation and human rights. In 2002 the organization's name was changed to the African Union. Its headquarters remained in Addis Ababa, Eth
- Palestine Liberation Organization
- {i} Palestinian political movement which seeks an independent Palestinian state
- Palestine Liberation Organization
- the full name of the PLO. Arabic Munaamat al-Tarr al-Filasniyyah Umbrella political organization representing the Palestinian people in their drive for a Palestinian state. It was formed in 1964 to centralize the leadership of various groups. After the Six-Day War of 1967, the PLO promoted a distinctively Palestinian agenda. In 1969 Ysir Araft, leader of Fatah, the PLO's largest faction, became its chairman. From the late 1960s the PLO engaged in guerrilla attacks on Israel from bases in Jordan, from which it was expelled in 1971. PLO headquarters moved to Lebanon. In 1974 Araft advocated limiting PLO activity to direct attacks against Israel, and the Arab community recognized the PLO as the sole legitimate representative of all Palestinians. It was admitted to the Arab League in 1976. In 1982 Israel invaded Lebanon and expelled PLO forces based there. In 1988 the PLO leadership, then based in Tunis, declared a Palestinian state and the following year elected Araft its president. It also recognized Israel's right to exist, though several militant factions dissented. In 1993 Israel recognized the PLO by signing an agreement with it granting Palestinian self-rule in parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The PLO became an integral part of the Palestinian National Authority. See also Palestine; Lebanese civil war; Hams; intifdah
- United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization
- {i} committee of the United Nations which deals with issues of education and culture throughout the world
- Working Mothers' Organization
- society for mother's that work
- World Trade Organization
- The World Trade Organization is an international organization that encourages and regulates trade between its member states. The abbreviation WTO is also used. the WTO an international organization, established in 1995 and based in Geneva, that deals with the rules of trade between different nations, and encourages them to trade fairly. International organization based in Geneva that supervises world trade. It was created by 104 members in 1995 to replace the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Like its predecessor, it aims to lower trade barriers and encourage multilateral trade. It monitors members' adherence to all GATT agreements and negotiates and implements new agreements. Critics of the WTO, including many opponents of economic globalization, have charged that it undermines national sovereignty by promoting the interests of large multinational corporations and that the trade liberalization it encourages leads to environmental damage and declining living standards for low-skilled workers in developing countries
- World Trade Organization
- international organization which handles and promotes international commerce
- Yad Lebanim organization
- Israeli organization which sets up memorials to fallen soldiers
- army organization
- In countries where conscription prevails a soldier is supposed to serve a given number of years
- army organization
- It for any reason he is not enrolled in the regular army, he may begin his service in the army reserves or even the home reserves, but then serves the full number of years or up to the age limit
- army organization
- The usual divisions are: (1) A regular or active army, in which soldiers serve continuously with the colors and live in barracks or cantonments when not in the field; (2) the reserves of this army, in which the soldiers, while remaining constantly subject to a call to the colors, live at their homes, being summoned more or less frequently to report for instruction, drill, or maneuvers; and (3) one or more classes of soldiers organized largely for territorial defense, living at home and having only occasional periods of drill and instraction, who are variously called home reserves (as in the table below), second, third, etc
- business organization
- business: a commercial or industrial enterprise and the people who constitute it; "he bought his brother's business"; "a small mom-and-pop business"; "a racially integrated business concern"
- cooperative organization
- {i} organization made of many people of groups who work together
- data organization
- way of efficiently organizing and storing information in a computer
- food and agriculture organization
- the United Nations agency concerned with the international organization of food and agriculture
- gestalt law of organization
- a principle of Gestalt psychology that identifies factors leading to particular forms of perceptual organization
- human rights organization
- {i} organization that works to protect the inalienable rights and privileges of every human being (especially working for people that are unable to defend their own rights)
- independent sales organization
- Company that independently solicits prospective merchants for Paymentech ISOs may either assume partial or shared financial liability for merchant activity
- independent sales organization
- [U S Merchant Services] Companies which independently solicit prospective merchants for MasterCard and Visa ISOs may either assume partial or shared financial liability for merchant activity
- independent sales organization
- An ISO is an Independent Sales Organization that represents a Bank or Bank/Processor alliance The ISO has an agreement to sell the services of the Bank or Bank/Processor alliance, and is allowed to mark up the Fees and sign up merchants
- independent sales organization
- An organization or individual, which is not an Acquirer, that engages in Merchant solicitation, sales or service, with respect to Transactions
- international maritime organization
- the United Nations agency concerned with international maritime activities
- international organization
- Institution drawing membership from at least three states, having activities in several states, and whose members are held together by a formal agreement. Only a few existed before 1850; several thousand were active in the early 21st century. Some are intergovernmental (e.g., the United Nations), and some are nongovernmental (e.g., Amnesty International). Some have multiple worldwide or regional purposes (e.g., the European Union), and some have single purposes (e.g., the World Intellectual Property Organization). One effect of their proliferation is a stronger sense of interdependence among states, which in turn has stimulated recognition of the need for cooperation to address international and global problems
- non profit organization
- organization that exists to further a cause not to make a profit
- non-governmental organization
- {i} NGO, organization that is not part a government, organization that is not part of the government structure in a direct manner
- non-governmental organization
- A non-governmental organization is the same as an NGO
- nongovernmental organization
- {i} NGO, organization that is not part a government, organization that is not part of the government structure in a direct manner
- nongovernmental organization
- An international organization made up of persons other than states
- nongovernmental organization
- A public or private institution of higher education; a public or private hospital; an Indian tribe or Indian tribal organization which is not a Federally-recognized Indian tribal government; and a quasi-public or private nonprofit government or commercial organization The term does not include a State or local agency, a foreign or international governmental organization (such as an agency of the United Nations), or a government-owned contractor-operated facility or research center
- nongovernmental organization
- an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government
- north atlantic treaty organization
- an international organization created in 1949 by the North Atlantic Treaty for purposes of collective security
- organization
- the persons (or committees or departments etc ) who make up a body for the purpose of administering something; "he claims that the present administration is corrupt"; "the governance of an association is responsible to its members"; "he quickly became recognized as a member of the establishment"
- organization
- means an entity within an agency that is headed by an official with the authority to establish tours of duty
- organization
- As term is used in commercial law, includes a corporation, government, or government subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust, partnership or association, two or more persons having a joint or common interest, or any other legal or commercial entity
- organization
- That which is organized; an organized existence; an organism an arrangement of parts for the performance of the functions necessary to life
- organization
- A non-random arrangement of parts, generally serving a purpose The restriction of the system to a small area of its state space
- organization
- An Organization signifies campus organizational entities to facilitate generation of reports and summarizations and to establish budget control, encumbrances, and security Organization codes closely follow the organizational structure of the College and are four-digit numeric codes, established in a hierarchical configuration of up to eight levels Examples of the hierarchy might be Vice President, Instuctional Services, Student Life, etc Organization codes are mandatory for all operating ledger transactions
- organization
- An identifiable social unit with a particular responsibility which endeavor to achieve multiple goals by coordinated activities and relationships between members and objects
- organization
- an ordered manner; orderliness by virtue of being methodical and well organized; "his compulsive organization was not an endearing quality"; "we can't do it unless we establish some system around here"
- organization
- the act of forming something; "the constitution of a PTA group last year"; "it was the establishment of his reputation"; "he still remembers the organization of the club"
- organization
- A company, corporation, firm, enterprise or institution, or part or combination thereof, whether incorporated or not, public or private, that has its own functions and administration For organizations with more than one operating unit, a single operating unit may be defined as an organization
- organization
- The level of government, either state or local, at which responsibility for the delivery of a delinquency service resides is said to be the level at which the service is "organized " Future versions of the State Profiles will clarify the extent to which states are involved in locally administered services through state subsidies, standards, regulations, certification, and training
- organization
- {i} arrangement; state of being organized; organized body; association, union (also organisation)
- organization
- the act of organizing a business or business-related activity; "he was brought in to supervise the organization of a new department"
- organization
- Extremely easy to navigate, the site's main page is designed with two white boxes in the middle of the page Under those boxes, the ABC's appear To get a listing of all terms available for each letter, simply click on the letter The terms appear in the left-hand box When you click on one of the terms, the information about it appears in the box on the right
- organization
- any fraternity, sorority, association, corporation, order, society, corps, athletic group, cooperative, club, service, social or similar group, whose members are or include students, operating at or in conjunction with an educational institution
- organization
- The organization of an event or activity involves making all the necessary arrangements for it. the exceptional attention to detail that goes into the organisation of this event Several projects have been delayed by poor organisation
- organization
- A unit within a company or other entity (e g , Government agency or branch of service) within which many projects are managed as a whole All projects within an organization share a common top-level manager and common policies
- organization
- a group of people who work together
- organization
- Organization is the internal structure of a piece of writing, the thread of central meaning, the pattern, so long as it fits the central idea Organizational structure can be based on comparison-contrast, deductive logic, point-by-point analysis, development of a central theme, chronological history of an event, or any of a dozen other identifiable patterns When the organization is strong, the piece begins meaningfully and creates in the writer a sense of anticipation that is, ultimately, systematically fulfilled Events proceed logically; information is given to the reader in the right doses at the right times so that the reader never loses interest Connections are strong, which is another way of saying that bridges from one idea to the next hold up The piece closes with a sense of resolution, tying up loose ends, bringing things to closure, answering important questions while still leaving the reader something to think about
- organization
- Institution having scientific responsiblity for applications for NIH support
- organization
- A unit within a company or other entity within which many projects are managed as a whole All projects within an organization share a common top-level manager and common policies
- organization
- Rutgers operating unit or department for financial accounting and human resource reporting purposes Employees are assigned to organizations to which they work
- organization
- By itself ``the organization'' is short for ``Jehovah's visible Christian organization'' (1Co 14: 33) <<We should attempt to introduce newly interested persons to the organization as early in their study as possible >>
- organization
- the activity or result of distributing or disposing persons or things properly or methodically; "his organization of the work force was very efficient"
- organization
- An identifiable social unit with a particular responsibility which endeavour to achieve multiple goals by coordinated activities and relationships between members and objects
- organization
- The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) established under the CWC
- organization chart
- A diagram of the various jobs and functions that are found in a company, and their relationship to one another
- organization chart
- An organization chart is a diagram or map that shows the hierarchy of a group or business It usually shows a person's name, and the position that person holds within the group or business
- organization chart
- Traditional way of showing the relationships between departmental and functional units or the reporting relationships between managers within an organization Organization charts tend to emphasize that each department is independent and to ignore the many relationships that exist when activities in one department interact with activities in other departments
- organization chart
- a graphic representation of the organization, positions, and reporting relationships of a company
- organization chart
- Organization Chart is an application that allows you to create organization charts in PowerPoint
- organization chart
- the management work product consisting of a diagram that documents the composition of the either the development organization or the project team in terms of its component teams and the aggregation relationships between them
- organization for the prohibition of chemical weapons
- international organization for chemical disarmament; administers the Chemical Weapons Convention
- organization man
- an employee who sacrifices his own individuality for the good of an organization
- organization of IDF veterans
- society for former soldiers of the Israeli military
- organization of american states
- an association of countries in the western hemisphere; created in 1948 to promote military and economic and social and cultural cooperation
- organization of events
- preparation of a major events (weddings, conventions, etc.)
- organization of petroleum exporting countries
- {i} OPEC, international organization for oil exporting countries that share the same commercial policies
- organization of petroleum-exporting countries
- an organization of countries formed in 1961 to agree on a common policy for the production and sale of petroleum
- organization structure
- {i} way in which an organization is managed, hierarchy of an organization
- palestine liberation organization
- a political movement uniting Palestinian Arabs in an effort to create an independent state of Palestine; when formed in 1964 it was a terrorist organization dominated by Yasser Arafat's al-Fatah; in 1968 Arafat became chairman; received recognition by the United Nations and by Arab states in 1974 as a government in exile; has played a largely political role since the creation of the Palestine National Authority
- philanthropic organization
- {i} benevolent and generous organization
- roof organization
- head organization, parent association
- social organization
- the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships; "the social organization of England and America is very different"; "sociologists have studied the changing structure of the family
- territorial defence organization
- military unit that works to protect border towns
- terrorist organization
- a political movement that uses terror as a weapon to achieve its goals
- umbrella organization
- {i} parent organization, main group
- world health organization
- a United Nations agency to coordinate international health activities and to help governments improve health services
- world organization
- an international alliance involving many different countries
- world trade organization
- An organization based in Geneva set up in 1995 to implement and enforce the Uruguay Round Agreement Replaces the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) WTO establishes the legal and institutional foundations of the international trading system It determines government obligations in trade legislation and regulation, and specifies trade dispute resolution mechanisms Currently has 142 member countries
- world trade organization
- An institution created by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade that oversees international trade issues, resolves trade disputes and enforces the GATT trade pact Abbreviated as WTO BACK TO TOP
- world trade organization
- The governing body for international trade established by the Uruguay round GATT agreement
- world trade organization
- created by the Uruguay Round of GATT to provide a permanent arena for member nations to address international trade issues and oversee implementation of trade agreements negotiated in the Uruguay Round
- world trade organization
- An international organization established by the Uruguay Round trade agreement to replace the institution created by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade known as the GATT The WTO provides a code of conduct for international commerce and a framework for periodic multilateral negotiations on trade liberalization and expansion The Uruguay Round trade agreement modified the code and the framework and established the World Trade Organization (WTO) on January 1, 1995
- world trade organization
- the WTO is a global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations
- world trade organization
- An association of 135 nations that meet to regulate international trade
- world trade organization
- Established 1995 as successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), aimed at liberalizing and securing international trade Formed in the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations, the WTO had 115 member nations in 1996, and fifteen others applied WTO rules to their trade policies Administered by a general council, trade dispute negotiation panel, and secretariat
- world trade organization
- Provisions to establish the WTO were reached in the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) The WTO is scheduled to be established no later than 1997 as an international organization of comparable stature to the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund The Organization is expected to facilitate implementation of trade agreements reached in the Uruguay Round by bringing them under one institutional umbrella, requiring full participation of all countries in one new trading system, and providing a permanent forum to discuss new issues facing the international trading system The WTO system will be available only to countries which: (a) are contracting parties to the GATT, (b) agree to adhere to all of the Uruguay Round agreements, and (c) submit schedules of market access commitments for industrial goods, agricultural goods, and services
- world trade organization
- The only global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations As of January 2002, the WTO had 144 member countries around the world and is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland Its functions include: administering WTO trade agreements; forum for trade negotiations; handling trade disputes; monitoring national trade policies; technical assistance and training for developing countries; cooperation with other international organizations
- world trade organization
- A Geneva-based free trade association with 128 member nations Formed in 1995 to administer the GATT, as well as the trade in services and intellectual property WTO secret panels rule on trade disputes among member nations
- world trade organization
- An international organization created to provide the ground rules for international trade and commerce