Betekenis van:
public trust

public trust
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a trust created for charitable or religious or educational or scientific purposes

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center conducts weekly measurements of Russians trust politicians
    2. There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty.
    3. The Shetland Islands Council (SIC), a public authority in Shetland, set up two trusts, the Shetland Development Trust (Development Trust) and the Shetland Islands Council Charitable Trust (Charitable Trust).
    4. Among national stakeholders, there will be improved understanding of and trust created in the role of the public health sector in biological incident response.
    5. The Land agriculture trust agency (LTS-Agrar) administers public loans and grants to promote agriculture, in particular agricultural investment and forestry measures.
    6. The Register should provide a list of reliable agencies whose assessments Member States (and public authorities within Member States) can trust.
    7. The Register should provide a list of reliable agencies whose assessments Member States (and public authorities within Member States) can trust. It should be founded on the following main principles.
    8. Therefore, in the light of the Stardust case [5] and given the fact that the funds of SLAP are derived from public funding and that the public authority is able, directly or indirectly, to exercise a dominant influence over both the Charitable Trust and its funds, the decisions regarding those funds must be regarded as decisions imputable to the public authority and granted through State resources.
    9. The Code of Practice shall aim at ensuring public trust in European statistics by establishing how European statistics are to be developed, produced and disseminated in conformity with the statistical principles as set out in Article 2(1) and best international statistical practice.
    10. Member States should seek to reduce the costs of network roll-out, in particular by enhancing the coordination of public works. Member States and the Union should promote the deployment and use of modern accessible online services, including by further developing e-government, e-signature, e-identity and e-payment; support active participation in the digital society, in particular by promoting access to cultural content and services including through media and digital literacy; and promote a climate of security and trust.
    11. Strengthening and improving the European science system, and addressing the following issues: improving the use and monitoring the impact of scientific advice and expertise for policy-making (including risk management); the future of scientific publications; measures to make scientific publications more accessible to members of the public wishing to consult them; safeguards for scientific domains open to misuse; and issues of fraud, trust and ‘self regulation’.
    12. Research that aims at better understanding trends and impacts of ICT on society and the economy may include, for example: impacts of ICT on productivity, employment, skills and wages; ICT as a driver for innovation in public and business services; obstacles to wider and faster innovation and use of ICT; new business models and exploitation paths, in coordination with other themes where ICT will play an important role in changing the approach to production and services; usability, utility and acceptability of ICT-based solutions; privacy, security and trust of ICT infrastructures; ethical issues of ICT developments; links to ICT-related legal, regulatory and governance frameworks; analyses of ICT support to, and impact on, Community policies.