Betekenis van:
world council

world council
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a council with representatives from different nations

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. The World Customs Organisation was established by Convention establishing a Customs Cooperation Council (signed on 15 December 1950).
    2. A Secure Europe in a Better World — the European Security Strategy, approved by the European Council, Brussels, 12 December 2003.’;
    3. In 1994 the Customs Cooperation Council adopted the working name ‘World Customs Organisation’, to more clearly reflect its scope.
    4. The Council also commended the sequenced initiatives of some EU Member States to provide protection to World Food Programme vessels.
    5. Following exploratory talks with the World Customs Organisation, the European Community and the World Customs Organisation examined the possibility for the European Community to exercise the rights and obligations akin to those of Members of the World Customs Organisation pending the ratification of the amended Convention establishing a Customs Cooperation Council by all Members of the World Customs Organisation.
    6. Council Joint Action 2007/468/CFSP (second CTBTO Joint Action), was aimed at studying and measuring the xenon background in several parts of the world for limited periods.
    7. The Lisbon European Council set the Community the objective of becoming the most competitive and dynamic knowledge economy in the world by 2010.
    8. The European Community accepts the rights and obligations akin to those of World Customs Organisation members as laid down in the World Customs Organisation Council decision pending the entry into force of the amendment of the Convention establishing a Customs Cooperation Council.
    9. The Convention establishing a Customs Cooperation Council is expected to be amended by the Council of the World Customs Organisation at its 109th/110th session in June 2007 to allow customs or economic unions, including the European Community to acquire membership of the World Customs Organisation.
    10. The World Customs Organisation was established by Convention establishing a Customs Cooperation Council (signed on 15 December 1950). The Convention came into force in 1952. In 1994 the Customs Cooperation Council adopted the working name ‘World Customs Organisation’, to more clearly reflect its scope.
    11. Where applicable, account has been taken of the guidance on the monitoring of greenhouse gases as developed by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the International Standardisation Organisation (ISO), the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Initiative of the World Business Council on Sustainable Development (WBCSD) and the World Resources Institute (WRI).
    12. The Member States of the European Community shall vote in favour of the Council of the World Customs Organisation decision according to which the European Community shall, as an interim measure, be granted rights akin to those enjoyed by World Customs Organisation Members, subject to the conditions contained therein.
    13. The Lisbon European Council of 23 and 24 March 2000 set the objective of making the European Union the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world.
    14. Endorsing the European Research Area, the Lisbon European Council in March 2000 set the Community the objective of becoming the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world by 2010.
    15. In the context of the Lisbon Strategy, the European Council in Barcelona, in March 2002, expressed their conclusion that European education and training systems should become a ‘world quality reference’,