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Page "Joint Intelligence Committee (United Kingdom)" ¶ 7
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Assuring and standards
: Farmers Assuring Responsible Management ( FARM ) animal care standards.

Assuring and .
Assuring luminaire setback is greater than 90 ° from highly reflective surfaces also diminishes reflectance.
Assuring them that Rowland was safe, the sheriff and his black deputy, Barney Cleaver, encouraged the men to return home.
* " Assuring Peace and a European Future in Bosnia and Hercegovina, Open Letter to Carl Bildt in the light of the " Dayton-2 "- negotiations at Butmir, Bosnia and Hercegovina, by Lord Paddy Ashdown, Wolfgang Petritsch und Christian Schwarz-Schilling, 18.
Assuring herself that Violet liked and was liked by her children, and aware they would all be at school soon, Ivy showed kindness towards Edgar to the end, gently withdrawing from his life before filing for divorce in 1918 and telling him that he was not to blame.
Assuring Ebert of the support of the Army, the General was given Ebert's promise to reinstate the military hierarchy and, with the help of the army, to take action against the Councils.
* Assuring citizen's safety.
* Assuring required infrastructure to effective government operation.
* Assuring good inter-clan relations by treating women justly, negotiating with " peace emissaries " in good faith, and sparing the lives of socially protected groups ( e. g. children, women, the pious, poets and guests ).
In June 1657, the Act of Settlement 1657 " for the Assuring, Confirming and Settling of lands and estates in Ireland " ratified previous decrees, judgments, grants and instructions made or given by the various officers and councils in applying the 1652 Act.
The Act of Settlement 1657 was an Act of the Cromwellian Parliament for the Assuring, Confirming and Settling of lands and estates in Ireland.

professional and standards
It should attempt to communicate both an appreciation of professional standards and an understanding of the tremendous powers and potentialities of genuinely open and pluralistic societies.
Amateur dramatics is the performance of plays or musical theater, often to high standards, but lacking the budgets of professional West End or Broadway performances.
They lived in 100 cantons ( 4. 1 ) from which 1000 young men per year were chosen for military service, a citizen-army by our standards and by comparison with the Roman professional army.
This involves upholding professional standards, promoting research and publications, providing educational opportunities, and fostering the exchange of knowledge among conservators, allied professionals, and the public.
Recently, initiatives such as BIOMEDEA have sprung up to develop BME-related education and professional standards.
< p > Most certification programs are created, sponsored, or affiliated with professional associations, trade organizations, or IT vendors interested in raising standards.
In order to apply professional standards, increase the level of practice, and possibly protect the public ( though this is also the domain of licensure ), a professional organization might establish a certification.
Most of the professional teams ' cheerleading squads would more accurately be described as dance teams by contemporary standards ; as they rarely, if ever, actively encourage crowd noise or perform modern cheerleading moves.
" In the end, Douglass grew to accept inoculation, but he stood his ground on the need for professional standards.
His research seminar for graduate students set professional standards for historical training at the University of Berlin ( 1824-1871 ).
Founded in 1998 to provide a non-political arena to discuss and implement changes to the profession of Hypnotherapy, UKCHO currently represents 9 of the UK's professional hypnotherapy organisations and has developed standards of training for hypnotherapists, along with codes of conduct and practice that all UKCHO registered hypnotherapists are governed by.
As a step towards the regulation of the hypnotherapy profession UKCHO's website now includes a National Public Register of Hypnotherapists who have been registered by UKCHO's Member Organisations and are therefore subject to UKCHO's professional standards.
* International Standards on Auditing, professional standards for the performance of audits of financial information
I – O psychologists adhere to professional standards, such as the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology's ( SIOP ) Principles for Validation and Use of Personnel Selection Procedures and the Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing.
A Certified Professional Midwife ( CPM ) is a knowledgeable, skilled and professional independent midwifery practitioner who has met the standards for certification set by the North American Registry of Midwives ( NARM ) and is qualified to provide the midwives model of care.
To protect the tenets of midwifery and support midwives to provide woman-centered care, the regulatory bodies and professional associations have legislation and standards in place to provide protection, particularly for choice of birth place, informed choice and continuity of care.
Deciding that he would like to become a professional teacher, Mao enrolled at a teacher training college, the Fourth Normal School of Changsha, which had high standards yet low fees and cheap accommodation.
In law, malpractice is a type of negligence in which the professional under a duty to act fails to follow generally accepted professional standards, and that breach of duty is the proximate cause of injury to a plaintiff who suffers harm.
The organization's stated primary purposes are " to advance the ideals and standards of professional cartooning in its many forms ", " to promote and foster a social, cultural and intellectual interchange among professional cartoonists of all types " and " to stimulate and encourage interest in and acceptance of the art of cartooning by aspiring cartoonists, students and the general public.
Moreover, " medical peer review " has been used by the American Medical Association to refer not only to the process of improving quality and safety in health care organizations, but also to the process of rating clinical behavior or compliance with professional society membership standards.
They have a " professional association, cognitive base, institutionalized training, licensing, work autonomy, colleague control ... ( and ) code of ethics ," to which Larson then also adds, " high standards of professional and intellectual excellence ," ( Larson, p. 221 ) that " professions are occupations with special power and prestige ," ( Larson, p. x ) and that they comprise " an exclusive elite group ," ( Larson, p. 20 ) in all societies.

professional and civilian
After 1806, the First Lord of the Admiralty was always a civilian, while the professional head of the navy came to be ( and is still today ) known as the First Sea Lord.
From the beginning of the republic and in the majority of civil cases towards the end of the empire, there were tribunals with the characteristics of the jury, the Roman judges being civilian, lay and not professional.
Although the system imposed a heavy tax on hired civilian farmers ( 40 % to 60 % of agricultural production ), the farmers were more than pleased to be able to work with relative stability and professional military protection in a time of chaos.
These victories may be ascribed to a well-trained army, which despite its comparatively small size was far more professional than most continental armies, and also to a modernization of administration ( both civilian and military ) in the course of the 17th century which enabled the monarchy to harness the resources of the country and its empire in an effective way.
Limassol also has an independent civilian Rugby Union team, the Limassol Crusaders, who play at the AEK Achileas Stadium and participate in the Joint Services Rugby League. There is a professional handball team, APEN Agiou Athanasiou.
That said, PMC " civilian contractors " have poor repute among professional government soldiers and officers – the US Military Command have questioned their war zone behavior.
Doctrine reflects the judgments of professional military officers, and to a lesser but important extent civilian leaders, about what is and is not militarily possible and necessary.
According to the 2000 United States Census, the industries in the town ( by percentage of employed civilian population 16 years and over ) were manufacturing at 20. 4 %, educational, health and social services with 19. 9 %, retail trade at 12. 8 %, arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation and food services with 9. 0 %, construction at 8. 0 %, other services ( except public administration ) with 6. 8 %, transportation, warehousing, and utilities at 4. 6 %, public administration with 3. 9 %, professional, scientific, management, administrative, and waste management services at 3. 7 %, finance, insurance, real estate, and rental and leasing with 3. 4 %, wholesale trade at 3. 4 %, information with 2. 2 % and agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and mining at 1. 9 %.
Senior enlisted advisors, service enlisted advisors and the SEA to the Chairman advise senior officer and civilian leaders on all issues affecting operational missions and the readiness, utilization, morale, technical and professional development, and quality of life of the enlisted force.
Key features of a military-specification jacket ( as opposed to a civilian version ) are one-piece back ( some knock-off jackets have a seam across the shoulder blades ; this seam causes discomfort during long flights in a confined position ) and lack of side-entry hand-warmer pockets under the large snap-down patch pockets ( apparently, the military designers did not want their pilots to be seen standing around with their hands in their pockets and believed that a lack of hand-warmer pockets would force pilots to be more productive and appear more professional ) and no interior pocket.
Again, while the Māori warrior was a civilian part-time fighter who could not afford to be away from home for too long, the British force consisted of professional soldiers supported by an economic system capable of sustaining them in the field almost indefinitely.
Sandhurst has a unique partnering agreement with the ' Inspirational Development Group ' ( IDG ), providing professional training for civilian organisations.
At that time, formal engineering in Britain was limited to the military engineers of the Corps of Royal Engineers, and in the spirit of self-help prevalent at the time and to provide a focus for the fledgling ' civilian engineers ', the Institution of Civil Engineers was founded as the world's first professional engineering body.
The work was done by professional civilian artists as well as talented amateur servicemen.
The war was conducted by professional forces on both sides, resulting in a relatively minimal number of civilian deaths.
This version is essentially a civilian version of the professional use 461 ( incorporating many of the improvements seen on the 463 ) and comes equipped with a 24V starter motor and a walk-on bonnet.
Although Stalingrad had already shown the level of danger which a city can pose to armies which fight within it and the importance of local support to armies, the Warsaw uprising was probably the first demonstration that in an urban terrain, a vastly under-equipped force supported by the civilian population can hold its own against far better equipped professional soldiers — though at the cost of vast sacrifices on the part of the city's residents.
In consultation with an informal conference of political parties, unions, and professional organizations — known as the " Gathering "— the military council appointed an interim civilian cabinet, headed by Prime Minister Dr. Al-Jazuli Daf ' allah.
Morrison ended his official career as the senior civilian intelligence professional in the Defence Intelligence Staff, serving four years as Deputy Chief of Defence Intelligence and Head of the Defence Intelligence Analysis Staff.
Proponents of the draft argue that it conserved the military's firm rooting in civilian society, and warn that a professional army might return to the militaristic, anti-democratic and elitist traditions of the Nazi and earlier eras.
This is partly due to U. S. concern that the professional members of General Staffs have historically demonstrated a tendency to lose touch with the operational forces they direct, and have occasionally come regard their judgements as equal to, if not superior to, the civilian governments they nominally serve.
Those candidates considering becoming a dental officer must consider the burden of family separation, his / her level of professional skill and responsibility in life threatening and often arduous situations when compared to his civilian counterpart.
Because of their special needs, and serious professional interest, their training may be very different from the " civilian self-defence " training which most undergo.
* Guidance on civilian personnel policy, professional development programs, and personnel security

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