His study of emerging managerial competences involved senior executives, twenty of whom participated in a round-table forum. |
|
Indeed, introducing indeterminism adds little in the way of worthwhile possibilities, opportunities, or competences to a universe. |
|
It is a matter of the coachee recognising himself which competences he needs in connection with his objectives and which path to go along. |
|
We cannot be taking decisions in the European fora on competences which the laws attribute to regions which are not present to defend them. |
|
Our control on chocking and our specialist's competences bring an optimized answer, integrating each installation's specific constraints. |
|
A pole of competences and subcontracting of these specialities borned in a country which currently does not have this sort of services. |
|
I can assure Mr Duff that the Commission is not going to be emasculated by the Constitution as regards Community competences. |
|
The limits of Union competences are governed by the principle of conferral. |
|
We suppose that this will foreshadow the debate to be held on one of the items in Annex IV, on the distribution of competences. |
|
Our global village now requires the assessment and recognition of skills and social competences, regardless of where and how they are gained. |
|
Provide working tools for the personnel and bonify the individual and community knowledge and competences. |
|
Persons under age or with limited competences as well as corporate body are forbidden to register. |
|
As managing director of the Ãœbersetzerei, I pull the strings and coordinate the linguistic and professional competences. |
|
Numerous competences are needed, requiring a more and more delicate attitude to the logic of actors and temporalities. |
|
This person in the same way as the person in the archive is learning or relearning both skills and social competences. |
|
Fourthly, in order to arbitrate in cases of conflicting competences, we propose a solution involving the courts rather than the political bodies. |
|
Yet again, the Union is appropriating the competences of the Member States and failing to replace their policies. |
|
In a knowledge-based society people must update and improve their competences and qualifications continuously. |
|
In Germany more than four million people are considered to be functionally illiterate, due to low level reading and writing competences. |
|
The increased emphasis on practical training orientated towards specific competences as outcomes is one. |
|
|
The provisions of the Charter shall not extend in any way the competences of the Union as defined in the Treaties. |
|
We must not allow the Commission to develop and impose a megalomaniac vision of its competences in the field of competition. |
|
Some of the key competences to be acquired through learning mobility are foreign languages and intercultural skills. |
|
This organisation would have autonomic competences to implement a coherent European Inland Waterway Transport policy. |
|
There is no need to force people to move abroad, but to move between jobs and broaden their competences. |
|
This also implies that EWCs need to extend their competences to develop alternative solutions in the course of consultation. |
|
Action requires additional practical skills, abilities and competences in the field of project management and cooperation. |
|
One should indeed underling the lack of adequate competences in the editing area in Africa. |
|
It was expected that this new combination of competences would provide the necessary educational setting for effective ESD to emerge. |
|
The potential and competences of employees of our company develop more each year. |
|
Our competences materialise through our capability to control all the mechanical technologies. |
|
Firms, at the same time, also need workers to be mobile so that workers can better match their skills and competences with new job openings. |
|
When environments are stable, firms with a mix in which competences and lock-ins dominate are able to deepen the specificities, resulting in high productivity. |
|
Another possible EU equivalent to the tenth amendment might be a proposed catalogue of competences assigning policy responsibilities to specific levels of government. |
|
A need for improvement is indicated even in the case of instruments designed to measure basic scholastic competences. |
|
The competences of the second chamber, and its relationship with the chamber of elected representatives, would then have to be determined. |
|
More efforts are needed to support the acquisition of key competences for those at risk of educational underachievement and social exclusion. |
|
It should be made clear that it is in no way intended to call into question national and regional competences in these areas. |
|
The development of Mistral lies in the apparels and this revival requires particular competences and important investments. |
|
This should involve the acquisition of more complex competences in school, including enhanced literary and numeracy skills and the ability to understand and communicate through the tools of modern technology. |
|
|
Through shared planning forecast for sales and replenishment, supplier and retailer can put together their competences and data in order to establish the most realistic replenishment planning. |
|
The facilitator clarified at the outset that the States Parties were not trying to usurp the competences of the Court, nor to upset the latter's functioning. |
|
This work is being supported by the development of tools such as the e-CV which will provide an overview of the skills and competences of all Commission staff. |
|
A railway undertaking employing a driver should take into account competences acquired earlier and should dispense with additional examinations and training as far as possible. |
|
This condition ensures scholastic and vocational training services in support of labour, coherent with its needs, and facilitates the recruitment of personnel through better evaluation of the competences they possess. |
|
We combine our competences in metallurgy, chemistry and materials science with a thorough understanding of our customers' needs, applications and systems. |
|
Especially with regard to the committee of inquiry, I would like to stress the fact that it should be an internationally constituted committee of enquiry and that its competences must be clearly delineated. |
|
You will foresee the level of French research in the field of magnetohydrodynamics5 and related science, with incredible working conditions if you take into account the competences gathered in this laboratory. |
|
Because of this, the judges are led to arbitrate between the different finalities, precisely through observation of externalities stemming from the implementation of the allocation of competences. |
|
Language competences are indissociable from mobility in Europe. |
|
Males should acquire some of the skills and competences that better qualify them to work in society, e.g., modern agricultural techniques, basic principles in carpentry and smithery, and similar activities. |
|
The concept that career officials bring to the policy process a specific collection of competences not readily adducible from political executives or their party-political appointees attained wide currency. |
|
Furthermore, the work of the immigrant must be valorised and an effort is to be made so that immigrants can work in accordance with their competences. |
|
Professional competences are highly domain-specific. |
|
This tool aims to help you to draft a map of your competences and on this basis you will be able to valorize the competences you have and the others you need to develop. |
|
British officials say their review of EU competences will serve as much to highlight the benefits of EU membership as to identify the powers to be repatriated. |
|
Local authorities' new competences require heavy investments in equipment, and the very concept of an endowment for operations should be re-defined. |
|
It is being implemented via a coherent set of Marie Curie actions, designed to help researchers build their skills and competences throughout their careers. |
|
Most of the competences are illustrated by an activity or an exercise. |
|
Studies confirm that learning mobility adds to human capital, as students access new knowledge and develop new linguistic skills and intercultural competences. |
|
|
Their experience within major international industrial groups and their firstclass competences will strengthen the complementarity of our Board of Directors. |
|
Because of the conflict in competences, the subject has become controversial and heavily charged, one in which everyone wanted to stake their own political claim with a view to political profiling. |
|
Some interesting fields for growth also arise for engine rebuilders through bespoke system solutions for workshops who are unable to build up suitable competences for this complex topic. |
|
Instead, a recent study revealed a majority in favour of returning regional competences to the federal level. |
|
They exert, among others, all those cultural competences that outside Brussels fall under the provinces. |
|
One of these five competences, reflected in approximately 2,000 patents held by is host firm, is used here as an example. |
|
The Law also establishes the competences of the state institutions regarding the control as well as the categories of the strategic materials under the control. |
|
Under the principle of conferral, the Union shall act only within the limits of the competences conferred upon it by the Member States in the Treaties to attain the objectives set out therein. |
|
The complementarity of the Kid's attitude team enables every child minder to have well defined tasks in the daily life of the crèche, but also to improve the competences of everyone by teamwork. |
|
The Treaty of Lisbon has given the European Parliament new competences, which is also why the European Parliament should be able to stand guard over the rights of citizens. |
|
In addition to qualitative interviews with teachers, questionnaires as well as performance and intelligence test, a specific instrument was developed to capture cultural competences. |
|
Computer based testing is also considered to be a better tool for adaptive tests where the choice of questions addressed to individual testees is tailored to the specific level of competences of the person. |
|
Hence it is in our own interests that we should, as MEPs, concentrate on the core competences we possess and should also give that outward expression. |
|
In fact, it employs various legal devices to increase the powers of Brussels, and it organises, amongst other things under the disguise of so-called shared competences, the sidelining of elected national governments. |
|
The reference tool makes it possible to assess the key competences acquired in formal or nonformal education by young people of low educational levels, with a view to validating them. |
|
For a summary of the respective competences of these authorities, see Voivodeships of Poland. |
|
It is because of the latter that he has just been awarded the Grand Prix de l'Urbanisme 2010 by a jury which saluted the competences of a great master urban planner. |
|
The achievement of the coaching process becomes visible to the clients, and even more to the companies that increase their competences of leadership and human resource management. |
|
I discovered the methods described hereafter, except the Socratic method suggested by Oscar Brenifier, during a formation offered by D'PHI, about the philosophical discussion and the moderator's competences. |
|
Dependently of competences and fields of activities of each authority, these services relate to culture, sport, leisure, urban waste, transportation, water, public safety, environment or parks to mention only these. |
|
|
In particular, there is a need for skills and competences that enable people to embrace change as an opportunity and to be open to new ideas in a culturally diverse, knowledge-based society. |
|
The second conclusion is that an observation of jurisprudence, whether in the United States or in Europe, should make economists diffident about affirming a normative foundation for the allocation of competences. |
|
Building on the activities aimed specifically at ITER and DEMO, the fusion programme will develop competences and enlarge the knowledge base in fields which are strategically relevant to future fusion power stations. |
|
We are now discussing in the Convention and elsewhere, the question of holding the Community organs to their proper competences and I am delighted that this regulation passes muster in that respect. |
|
This last bracer boost your nanoskill competences, yes all of them. |
|
I am one of those who believes that it is not true that citizens want to re-nationalise competences, nor do they think the European Union is some kind of giant whose voracity knows no bounds. |
|
So I must reject the reproach made against the Commission that it has arrogated unto itself certain competences that it should not have, that it is framing its own system of rules. |
|
I might also remind you that the issue of delimiting competences is also proving to be significant in the debate that is currently ongoing in the Convention. |
|
One of the great merits of economic theories of public action is that they simplify, by abstraction, the multiform interdependences drawn from observation and offer a guide to the allocation of competences. |
|
It would be a short-sighted attitude which is largely hypocritical and out of keeping with the irreversible prospect of an extension of the Union's competences and geographical enlargement of the Union's strategy. |
|
In the national parliaments and national governments of the EU Member States, a question that is often raised is whether the EU should reel in further competences. |
|
Foreign language skills and intercultural competences widen an individual's professional options, upgrade the skills of the European workforce and are essential elements of genuine European identity. |
|
In order to exercise its competences responsibly, however, this Parliament must be demanding rather than complacent, it cannot resort to haughtiness nor act with the arrogance of a mandarin. |
|
As you can see, much is expected of your competences and your commitment, but I have no doubt that you will perform the duties assigned to you with both wisdom and perspicacity. |
|
The United States has noted the two-prong approach required in the case of the European Union, in which competences in that area are divided between the Community and the Member States. |
|
This Directive does not alter the division of competences between the European Union and its Member States, including in the area of marital and family law and health law. |
|
This is not about having some kind of hidebound discussion for legal experts, an exercise in legal hair splitting as it were, but concerns an eminently political issue, namely that of competences and the demarcation thereof. |
|
At least six training programs will be organized annually, allowing personnel of other laboratories in the sub-region to enhance their competences. |
|
Starting immediately, the Commission and the ERCEA will take initiatives under their respective competences to ameliorate the governance and administrative flexibility of the ERC within the current regulatory framework. |
|
In order to achieve this, social partners at all levels will need to reinforce their capacities not only in administrative terms but also in the promotion of the competences required to deliver such results. |
|
|
Safety, not the request for competences, must be top of the list. |
|
But, beneath the superficiality of the comments that have circulated to date, that revitalization effort actually proposes taking away from the Assembly the competences conferred upon it under the Charter. |
|
Calyon's team work and the competences developed in the areas of origination, structuring and debt distribution were key success factors in this transaction. |
|
Around this kernel, the firm is continually enlarging the field of its competences and strengthening its relations with long-established clients, by responding specifically to their evolving needs. |
|
Here we are making maximum use of our own competences, but we are also moving beyond the comfort zone of these and are exploring potentially profitable areas, well away from our home base. |
|
Members of the Flemish Parliament who were elected in the Brussels Region cannot vote on affairs belonging to the competences of the Flemish Region. |
|