Organizational and procedural matters
3. The forty-fifth session of the Board was held at UNIDO Headquarters, Vienna
International Centre, from 27 to 29 June 2017 (five plenary meetings).
(...) The Board decided to suspend rule 23, paragraph 3, and
Appendix A with regard to the rotation of officers of the Board within a
five-year cycle and to elect as President of the forty-fifth session a representative of
the States in List C (GRULAC), as the next Group in line for the office. (...) GC.17/3
V.17-05644 10/26
Annex I
Decisions adopted by the Board at its forty-fifth session
Decision No. Title Page
1 Election of the President of the Industrial development
Board
11
2 Utilization of available conference-servicing resources 11
3 Appointment of the Director General 11
4 Terms and conditions of appointment of the Director
General
11
5 Annual Report 13
6 Report of the External Auditor for 2016 13
7 Financial situation of UNIDO 14
8 Scale of assessments, 2018-2019 14
9 Working Capital Fund for the biennium 2018-2019 15
10 JIU review of management and administration in
UNIDO
15
11 Programme and budgets, 2018-2019 15
12 Medium-term programme framework, 2018-2021 16
13 UNIDO Independent Audit Advisory Committee 18
14 Preparations for the seventeenth session of the General
Conference
19
15 Personnel matters 20
16 Appropriate procedures for reviewing the applications
of non-governmental organizations for consultative
status
21
17 Provisional agenda and date of the forty-sixth session 22
GC.17/3
11/26 V.17-05644
IDB.45/Dec.1 Election of the President of the Industrial Development Board
The Industrial Development Board decided to suspend rule 23, paragraph 3,
and Appendix A with regard to the rotation of officers of the Board within a
five-year cycle and to elect as President of the forty-fifth session a representative of
the States in List C (GRULAC), as the next Group in line for the office.
Language:English
Score: 1044132.4
-
https://www.unido.org/sites/de...E_Report_IDB.45_V1705644_0.pdf
Data Source: un
Organizational and procedural matters
3. The forty-fifth session of the Board was held at UNIDO Headquarters, Vienna
International Centre, from 27 to 29 June 2017 (five plenary meetings).
(...) The Board decided to suspend rule 23, paragraph 3, and
Appendix A with regard to the rotation of officers of the Board within a
five-year cycle and to elect as President of the forty-fifth session a representative of
the States in List C (GRULAC), as the next Group in line for the office. (...) GC.17/3
V.17-05644 10/26
Annex I
Decisions adopted by the Board at its forty-fifth session
Decision No. Title Page
1 Election of the President of the Industrial development
Board
11
2 Utilization of available conference-servicing resources 11
3 Appointment of the Director General 11
4 Terms and conditions of appointment of the Director
General
11
5 Annual Report 13
6 Report of the External Auditor for 2016 13
7 Financial situation of UNIDO 14
8 Scale of assessments, 2018-2019 14
9 Working Capital Fund for the biennium 2018-2019 15
10 JIU review of management and administration in
UNIDO
15
11 Programme and budgets, 2018-2019 15
12 Medium-term programme framework, 2018-2021 16
13 UNIDO Independent Audit Advisory Committee 18
14 Preparations for the seventeenth session of the General
Conference
19
15 Personnel matters 20
16 Appropriate procedures for reviewing the applications
of non-governmental organizations for consultative
status
21
17 Provisional agenda and date of the forty-sixth session 22
GC.17/3
11/26 V.17-05644
IDB.45/Dec.1 Election of the President of the Industrial Development Board
The Industrial Development Board decided to suspend rule 23, paragraph 3,
and Appendix A with regard to the rotation of officers of the Board within a
five-year cycle and to elect as President of the forty-fifth session a representative of
the States in List C (GRULAC), as the next Group in line for the office.
Language:English
Score: 1044132.4
-
https://www.unido.org/api/open...oad/8367464/unido-file-8367464
Data Source: un
The case for the
transfer application shall not be heard after the elapse of five years of granting the
protection unless the applicant's bad faith is established.
(...) However, the protection period for trees shall be twenty five
years.
(d) The industrial model certificate protection period shall be ten years from the
date of filing the application.
(...) (c) An invention is deemed industrially applicable if it can be manufactured or
used in any type of industry or agriculture, including handicrafts, fishing and
services.
Article Forty Five:
In the application of provisions of this Law, the following shall not be
regarded as inventions:
(a) Discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods.
Language:English
Score: 1043473.6
-
https://www.wto.org/english/th...e/sau_e/WTACCSAU59A2_LEG_6.pdf
Data Source: un
Main menu
About the ICTR
The Genocide
The Cases
Documents
News
You are here
Home » News
News
Five Judges Sworn In
Press release |
Fri, 09/17/2004
Five Judges were sworn in at a ceremony held today at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. (...) There are now eight female judges in the Trial Chambers.
The arrival of these five judges will enable the Tribunal to commence trials in two cases involving five accused. (...) The commencement of these trials will bring the number of accused on trial to twenty-five and the number of persons whose trials have either been completed or are in progress to forty-eight.
Language:English
Score: 1041730.4
-
https://unictr.irmct.org/en/news/five-judges-sworn
Data Source: un
Main menu
About the ICTR
The Genocide
The Cases
Documents
News
You are here
Home » News
News
Five Judges Sworn In
Press release |
Fri, 09/17/2004
Five Judges were sworn in at a ceremony held today at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. (...) There are now eight female judges in the Trial Chambers.
The arrival of these five judges will enable the Tribunal to commence trials in two cases involving five accused. (...) The commencement of these trials will bring the number of accused on trial to twenty-five and the number of persons whose trials have either been completed or are in progress to forty-eight.
Language:English
Score: 1041730.4
-
https://unictr.irmct.org/en/node/423
Data Source: un
If fertility rates have been approximately constant in the recent history of the population in question, if the reported fertilityhistories have not been substantially affected by migration, and if differential mortality accord- ing to the prolificacy of the woman has not had an impor- tant effect on the survival of mothers, the average number of children ever born to women past age forty-five or fifty equals total fertility. MOle precisely, the average number of children ever born per woman aged forty-five to forty- nine equals the total fertility of this cohort of women, which in turn is about the same as the total fertility of the population at the time of the census or survey, provided fertility rates in the population have been approximately constant. (...) In many censuses or demographic surveys the average number of children ever born increases too gradually with age, especially at ages above thirty or thirty-five, and indeed a common feature of many censuses is reported average numbers of children ever born that declinewith age above age forty-five 01 fifty. (...) Romaniuk, and E. van de Walle, The Demography of Tropical Africa (Princeton, Princeton University Press), (in press), chapter III.
31
ever born is very frequently a downward-biased estimate of the cumulative fertility experience of women over thirty or thirty-five, and the average parity of women past age forty-five or fifty, being typically understated, would usually provide an underestimate of total fertility.
Language:English
Score: 1040918.4
-
https://www.un.org/en/developm.../estimate/manual4/chapter2.pdf
Data Source: un
The workshop in Ethiopia is the third in the series of five such events the Division for the
Advancement of Women is organizing for national machineries. (...) Venue and participants
The five-day event will take place at the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
(...) On the final day, the results of the discussions in the meeting, strategies for the proposed prototype website, and the proposed framework for an e-based network, will be presented in plenary.
Participants in the five-day meeting will convene in plenary as well as in working groups.
Language:English
Score: 1040550
-
https://www.un.org/womenwatch/...Addis%20I%20Aide%20Memoire.pdf
Data Source: un
During its forty-fifth session, the Committee adopted five statements: on the situation in Haiti (see annex IV), on the inclusion of Afghan women in the process of peacebuilding, security and reconstruction in Afghanistan (see annex V), on its relationship with parliamentarians (see annex VI) as well as with non-governmental organizations (see annex VII) and on the 15-year review of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (see annex VIII). (...) Results of the Committee’s forty-fourth and forty-fifth sessions
A. Reports considered by the Committee
4. (...) The Committee decided that the Secretariat should systematically remind States parties whose reports were five years or more overdue to submit their reports as soon as possible.
Language:English
Score: 1040013.3
-
https://www.un.org/womenwatch/...ng15/docs/ECN62010CRP2%20E.pdf
Data Source: un
The Chamber found that the Prosecution violated its disclosure obligations with respect
to the late disclosure of the Mujkić Documents.53 The Chamber had previously concluded that
46 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 33; Fifty-Fifth Decision, para. 12. 47 Fifty-Fifth Decision, para. 12. 48 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 33. 49 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 33. 50 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 33. 51 Forty-Fourth Motion, Annex A, p. 99. 52 P2344 (Witness statement of KDZ020 dated 17 February 2011), para. 53 (under seal). 53 Forty-Ninth and Fiftieth Decision, para. 38; Fifty-Fifth Decision, paras. 10–11. (...) The Chamber found that the Prosecution violated its disclosure obligations with respect
to the late disclosure of the Situation Report.61 However, the Chamber having reviewed the
54 Forty-Ninth and Fiftieth Decision, paras. 47–48; Fifty-Fifth Decision, para. 12. 55 Fifty-Fifth Decision, para. 12. 56 T. 12411–12413 (25 February 2011). 57 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 34. 58 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 35. 59 Forty-Third to Forty-Fifth Decision, para. 35. 60 T. 1259–1262 (15 April 2010). 61 Forty-Seventh Decision, para. 16.
59183
Case No. (...) The Chamber found that the Prosecution violated its disclosure obligations with respect
to the late disclosure of the Statement.67 However, the Chamber having reviewed the Statement
concluded that the Accused suffered no prejudice as a result of this violation given that its
content was not of such significance and that its late disclosure did not have a detrimental
impact on his cross-examination of witnesses.68 In reaching that conclusion the Chamber noted
that the “Accused has already cross-examined witnesses regarding the arming of Muslims in
Zvornik” and that he had an opportunity to elicit the favourable information contained in the
Statement through another witness but failed to do so.69 The Chamber has also observed that
five of the six witnesses have already testified or been questioned about the extent to which
62 Forty-Seventh Decision, para. 17. 63 Forty-Seventh Decision, para. 17. 64 Forty-Seventh Decision, para. 18. 65 T. 13752–13753, 13758–13759 (21 March 2011). 66 Response, para. 19. 67 Fifty-Ninth Decision, para. 10. 68 Fifty-Ninth Decision, para. 11. 69 Fifty-Ninth Decision, para. 11.
59182
Case No.
Language:English
Score: 1032841.4
-
https://www.icty.org/x/cases/karadzic/tdec/en/120120.pdf
Data Source: un
Review and Appraisal of the Beijing Platform for Action and the Outcome document of the Twenty-third special session of the General Assembly, March 2005
Home | Contact Us
About us
Beijing and its Follow-up
CSW
ECOSOC
General Assembly
Expert Group Meetings
Violence against Women
Publications
NGO Participation
Technical Cooperation
First World Conference
Second World Conference
Third World Conference
Fourth World Conference
Beijing Declaration
Platform For Action
Official Documents
Statements By Governments
Statements by United Nations and Inter-governmental Organizations
Statements by Non-governmental Organizations
The Platform for Action, DPI Brochure
Photo Gallery
Five-year Review and Appraisal
Beijing+5 and beyond
Documents
Summaries of panel discussions
Responses to Questionnaire
Press kit
Pre-session briefing
Programme of Activities
NGO participation
Ten-year Review and Appraisal
Overview
Draft Provisional Agenda
Official Documents
Resolutions
Statements
High-Level Events
NGO Participation
Side/Parallel Events
Questionnaire to Member States
Responses
Expert Group Meetings
Regional Processes
Relevant Links
Beijing at Ten and Beyond
Fifteen-year Review and Appraisal
National level review of implementation
Questionnaire
Member States responses
Regional 15-year review processes
Regional reports
Regional meetings
Global 15-year review process in the 54th session of the Commission on the Status of Women
Overview
Documentation
Interactive events
Outcome
Participation
Commemoration of the 15th anniversary by the General Assembly
Related intergovernmental processes
Beijing and its Follow-up > Ten-year Review and Appraisal
Ten-year Review and Appraisal of the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the outcome of the twenty-third special session of the General Assembly held during the forty-ninth session of the CSW, from 28 February to 11 March 2005
Background
In the Political Declaration adopted in by the United Nations General Assembly at its twenty-third special session in June 2000, Member States agreed to "assess regularly further implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action with a view to bringing together all parties involved in 2005 to assess progress and consider new initiatives, as appropriate, ten years after the adoption of the Beijing Platform for Action".
A review and appraisal of the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action adopted at the Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing, 1995), and the outcome of the twenty-third special session of the General Assembly (2000), was mandated in the multi-year programme of work of the Commission on the Status of Women for its forty-ninth session in March 2005. The Commission considered two themes:
"Review of the implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action and the outcome documents of the twenty-third special session of the General Assembly"; and
"Current challenges and forward-looking strategies for the advancement and empowerment of women and girls"
The review and appraisal by the Commission focused on implementation at national level and identify achievements, gaps and challenges and provided an indication of areas where actions and initiatives, within the framework of the Platform for Action and the outcome of the special session (Beijing+5), are most urgent to further implementation.
Language:English
Score: 1032332
-
https://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/Review/english/49sess.htm
Data Source: un