Sentences with phrase «agreed definition»

And that, she says, will not be straightforward: there is currently no internationally agreed definition of space debris.
Interestingly there is no internationally agreed definition, leading to huge variation of what constitutes pregnancy loss.
A protocol would set common agreed definitions and industry standards on what materials are put into the marketplace.
There is no universally agreed definition of what constitutes low carb.
The argument itself requires and encourages not only shared concerns but shared values: a desire for the common good, for example, and some broadly agreed definitions of what that common good is, or at least the desire to argue over the definition.
There is no widely agreed definition of what constitutes «a people»; in general, though, the term generally denote [s] a kind of collective identity that is grounded in a shared history and culture and may or may not lay claim to some kind of political recognition as well as a specific territory.
«The word Fascism has now no meaning except in so far as it signifies «something not desirable»... In the case of a word like democracy, not only is there no agreed definition, but the attempt to make one is resisted from all sides.
«Creating agreed definitions of quantities is crucial for the industry and economy of all advanced technological societies.»
Within the literature there is no single agreed definition of e-learning (Lin, Chen & Liu, 2017; Sherwood, 2017), the lack of precision in the terminology, argues Fernández - Pampillón & Pareja - Lora (2017), generates a certain degree of confusion among eLearning specialists and non-specialists alike.
A survey of health and nutrition claims on food packaging using a newly defined taxonomy of claims and internationally agreed definitions of claim types.
Of course, forced labour (a term which at least has an agreed definition, unlike «modern day slavery») is a labour market phenomenon not solely affecting migrants.
An agreed definition of what «school - readiness» means could be the first step to helping schools, parents and early years practitioners identify what national or localised support is required to meet this growing issue.»
But the new study, commissioned by King's College London, found that schools find it «difficult» to target the group and monitor support because there is no «agreed definition of the term».
There is no agreed definition of a «major economy».
How is it possible to measure and compare international climate finance contributions when there are as yet no established metrics or agreed definitions of the quality of climate finance?
Firstly, the most pressing task for further research in CSA is to agree definitions and validate measures for this population.
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