Coordination
coordination (noun) - working together, organizing activities so that people can work together efficiently
global coordination, coordinated global action - organizing the efforts of different countries so that they can work together efficiently
global coordination needed
a quick bank recapitalisation with global coordination
a guarantee of deposits and/or loans with global coordination
international coordination
policy coordination
coordination of economic and monetary policies
international policy coordination
security coordination
given large powers of fuel policy coordination
better coordination
greater coordination
facilitate coordination
poor coordination
economic coordination
the serious difficulties of economic coordination
market coordination
coordination of coal and steel production
planning, coordination, regulation
efficiencies and economies from coordination
a need for coordination
a lack of coordination
requires coordination
requires good eye and hand coordination
coordination with Y
coordination between X and Y
cooperation and coordination
coordination and control
coordination and control of management information systems
coordination of different processes
the complexities of coordination
coordination detiorates
if the coordination detiorates in any way....
responsibility for overall coordination
assumes the main responsibility for overall coordination
the coordination, integration and binding together of services
providing adequate coordination and communication mechanisms
a tendency for regions to duplicate planning management and personnel thus increasing overhead costs and problems of coordination and integration
requirement for due diligence, the coordination of which may fall within the deal management role
inter-company coordination of premium rates and policy conditions, and averaging of claims
coordination centre
Example sentences:
* It was also expected to work for the coordination of economic and monetary policies and the harmonisation of fiscal and social policies, and of law.
* For the Schuman plan had implications beyond a simple coordination of coal and steel production.
* There were, for a start, serious difficulties of economic coordination.
* Finally, the system must provide for the coordination, integration and binding together of services so that they function as one
* From coordination we get efficiencies and economies.
* In a similar way, there would be a tendency for regions to duplicate planning management, personnel and training management, accountancy management etc, thus increasing overhead costs and problems of coordination and integration.
* The local authorities' functions would be in the planning, coordination, regulation and finance of community care, rather than its direct provision.
* He had mind coordination more than body coordination.
* For example, given that streets must be dug up and completely reconstructed to create a Woonerf, there are the complexities of coordination with utilities which use the street as conduits for pipes and cables.
* A coordination centre has been established in the Czech Republic.
* The relationship between Ministers and the new Electricity Boards, though laid down by statute, was not rigidly specified, but large powers of fuel policy coordination, and of oversight of finance and general policy, were given to the Minister.
* Especially problematic was the fact that the informal and formal networks never came together nor were the views and opinions of the informal network adequately appraised by the formal care givers who had the responsibility for overall coordination.
* Moreover in any organization with a large number of service points, for instance, a public library authority --; use of a base selection source also allows coordination of the acquisition and cataloguing processes.
* Coordination or control of management information systems, inter alia, to provide the basis for calculating the cost of resources, and establishing effective monitoring and control mechanisms throughout.
* That indeed was the case, with the appearance of another loose intergovernmental structure, a Conference of European Ministers of Transport, which could only suggest and advise, though it did have some success in persuading ten states to sign a convention on cooperation and coordination of their rail networks in 1953.
* While some cooperation and coordination in a specific sector might be possible, as long as the hope was to embrace the whole of Western Europe in its ambit, any scheme could only be minimalist.
* The formal duties of the conference are to decide whether or not to place a child's name on the Child Protection Register and, if so, to appoint akey worker who then assumes the main responsibility for overall coordination of any subsequent work with the child and the family.
* However, performing many of the stunts requires good eye and hand coordination, as well as lots and lots of grip and strength.
* When acting as a lead adviser in respect of an acquisition of a private company or business by a listed company there is the normal requirement for due diligence, the coordination of which may fall within the deal management role.
* According to the leading present-day authority on this sector, Professor Supple, it was over the course of the eighteenth century that it assumed its modern form and structure, with agencies and branches, inter-company coordination of premium rates and policy conditions, and averaging of claims.






