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词汇 example_english_human-resources
释义

Examples of human resources


These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Similarly, controlling for aspiration-driven pressures for freedom, some independent variation in humanresources will remain and add to the aspiration-driven pressure.
However, the range of challenges to the management of humanresources in health care demands a wide range of information to inform policies.
Even so, the results presented here highlight the potential humanresources ramifications from company's pension choices.
Concentrating solely on whether they developed according to the image of intensive farming overlooks how farmers used their land and humanresources for development.
Today, rationing is mostly due to lack of humanresources.
The third was the organization of the labour service system, in order to mobilize humanresources in connection with tax collection and public works.
This choice is based on the availability of pre-existing cultural "material" and humanresources.
The rapid changes in algorithms of radiological procedures have negatively affected the standardization of humanresources for radiology.
All communities should be encouraged to build on their unique strengths involving, for example, cultural development and local humanresources.
Many managers used (some unconsciously) age stereotypes in the deployment of the organisation's humanresources.
As with humanresources, the pressure for freedom generated by liberty aspirations does not depend on the level of these values alone.
Understanding how gender works in science is crucial for both mobilizing humanresources and for bringing new perspectives, priorities, and creative ferment to science.
Whatever humanresources could be removed from the land were mobilized into fighting men rather than labourers for productive enterprises.
Several countries have launched efforts to reorganize their primary health care, including increased reliance on regional health systems and strengthening humanresources.
Generally, capacity building is taken to mean training of humanresources.
As for humanresources, nature repeatedly depleted them, but in a pre-machine age, human labour was crucial to production.
In contrast, it is particularly hard to track humanresources within the primary care sector.
But one must underscore that, if we were forced to proceed in this manner, it was because of a lack of humanresources.
Some employers also have recognised that continued education and retraining is a necessity and that premature retirement is a waste of humanresources.
Various factors were assessed including the feasibility, costs, limited humanresources, time limitations and also the inherent biases, which exist with each type of study.
Recognizing that health system reform is closely intertwined with the availability of health human resources, many countries have made health workforce issues a major priority.
If humanresources act on growing freedom, it is crucial which resources people command when these changes happen.
This has resulted in a readiness on the part of civil society to devote very significant material and humanresources to the military effort.
Logistic constraints, available humanresources, community participation, and management of injection safety are among the challenges.
Church leaders and missionaries often attributed their lack of success to a chronic lack of financial and humanresources.
Longer intervals, however, may be required because of the scarcity of humanresources and financial means.
For its part, the government should shed all ego-tripping, grandiose indulgences by channelling the development of its humanresources through education.
Co-operation among cities was seen as an essential tool for peace and social reform and a means of nationalising and democratising economic and humanresources.
The resulting tensions impeded the most effective use of all three organisations' humanresources.
Church leaders and missionaries often attributed this to a chronic lack of financial and humanresources.
It is characterized by its smallness and intensive use of humanresources.
However, as the population ages, it seems that the demands for home care will outpace the economic and humanresources to meet those demands.
A straightforward dynamic extension of the model illustrates the possible crowding-in effects through investment-stock effects related to the natural and humanresources controlled by households.
One of the latter functions entails the recruitment, placement, supervision and motivation of humanresources.
In a sense, the diversity and equality agenda plays down the issue of conflict, in a manner similar to the humanresources approach to diversity.
Linked through their common focus on autonomous human choice, humanresources and liberty aspirations provide overlapping sources of pressure for the growth of freedom.
Thus, in already high-ranking societies both humanresources and liberty aspirations values helped to reduce losses of freedom.
A more systematic way of doing this is to multiply the impact of humanresources and postmaterialism, by the previous lack of freedom.
Thus, both humanresources and liberty aspirations helped to increase gains in freedom among previously authoritarian societies.
One important factor is the availability of financial and humanresources to undertake economic evaluations and to assess their quality.
Access to diabetes education remains a major concern and is limited by inadequate humanresources, geography, and funding.
Central administrative costs such as finance and humanresources are not taken into account.
As a result, academic leaders need to understand the humanresources, reputation, and public relations risks that can emerge when retirement benefits are changed.
Humanresources reflect capabilities of choice, liberty aspirations reflect ambitions for choice, and legal freedom reflects entitlements to choice.
Unlike market transactions where producers fund their advertising costs, however, politicians primarily depend on party activists who provide them with financial and humanresources.
Worse still, in addition to the shortage of humanresources for health, there is often inequitable distribution of available humanresources.
For instance, formal organisations have superior technical knowledge and greater humanresources, while informal networks are better able to help with unpredictable everyday tasks.
Without specific attention to age group dynamics, however, unintended consequences can result which may lead to the sub-optimal utilisation of humanresources.
Firms with larger humanresources departments are more likely to participate.
Thus disadvantaged areas may contain considerable humanresources.
Humanresources managers tend intuitively to work within a framework that puts disability into a context.
It had also lost its young, male humanresources, which would affect future generations.
Second, it reduces the supply of domestic humanresources.
But this alternative seems less plausible in the face of the strong temporal inertia of humanresources and liberty aspirations.
Among both groups, humanresources and liberty aspirations seem to work in favor of freedom - within the given margin of growth.
She consults some relevant literature, asks the humanresources department about the pension plan of her company, and calculates her freely available income.
Delivering intensive communitybased hand-washing promotion campaigns to all such communities worldwide would require a substantial commitment of financial and humanresources.
In such organisations, managerial functions include the ability to acquire and allocate physical, financial and humanresources between competing demands.
This research illustrates that technology use is never inconsequential and is often a high-stakes innovation in terms of costs, humanresources and expectations involved.
The final priority is to mobilize humanresources for rural development.
They hesitate to address economic inequalities in order not to frighten away capital, disrupt the economy, and lead to a loss of skilled humanresources.
Dedicated humanresources are needed from each partner to carry out a multinational joint assessment.
The social services allocate substantial economic and humanresources toward managing the social and economic consequences of alcohol-related problems.
On the contrary, there has been a lack of available humanresources, for example, among physicians and nurses.
And these are cultures that involve material as well as humanresources.
Further, instead of routine tasks, the limited humanresources can now concentrate on more complicated services.
Thus, the theme of human choice links institutionalized freedom to humanresources and to liberty aspirations.
These are neatly discussed via headings covering fiscal change, inter-sectoral competition, performance measurement, technology, legitimacy and humanresources.
Within the limits set by the extent to which freedom is not yet present, humanresources and liberty aspirations are conducive to the growth of political freedom in interchangeable ways.
Yet the interviews show that for many firms joining a trade association was something of an alternative route for gaining information to developing a large, professional humanresources department.
After a very brief survey of controversies in labour market flexibilisation, the theme of occupational citizenship is contextualised in terms of the development of humanresources.
Books on organisational management and the management of humanresources were used for information on the historical development of workplace relationships and the organisation of work.
In this context the conventional distinctions among natural resources, the environment, and humanresources blur.
In addition to providing access to material and humanresources, both titles entailed responsibilities to negotiate with the anthropomorphized beings that controlled the natural forces of the territory.
Consultation is a use of the intellectual capital of humanresources, in that persons involved have a specialized knowledge, which is used to attain the goals of consultation.
Such an approach helps to upgrade the humanresources of rural communities, enabling people to continue the process of innovation on their own or with reduced external support.
Efficient management of the nation's portfolio of humanresources is proposed as a path of drug-control effort that maximizes the present value of the stream of disposable national incomes.
Many of these perceptions were not articulated but were covert assumptions, and, at least in some cases, they impeded the optimal deployment of the organisation's humanresources.
In general, the problem of developing humanresources demonstrates the difficulty of separating social from labour policy, and of assuming that atomised markets make for optimal resource allocation.
The involvement of all practices and both medical and nonmedical personnel will mean a larger pool of humanresources is available from which to provide the required expertise.
The country, surprisingly, has been relatively successful at mobilising its humanresources, and with its potential of rich natural resources, may be able to chart its own course forward.
In short, as there were no written rules concerning the management of humanresources, when workers were required it was necessary to agree on a scale and method of payment.
In view of current circumstances, the section on humanresources development and employment deserves more emphasis.
This is not a small proportion of variance, but it is considerably less than is explained by the common theme underlying humanresources, liberty aspirations, and legal freedom.
Where financial and humanresources are scarce, and where institutions and public accountability are weak, it will not generally be possible for countries to work their way through the checklist.
Two concern the influence on participation of institutional variables: membership in a national employers' association and number of employees in the firms' humanresources department.
But a great many long-run dilemmas - from infrastructural investment to the management of natural and humanresources to the sustainability of the welfare state - do affect highly mobilized groups.
Thus, pressure for the growth of freedom reflects the product of the growth margin multiplied by the strength of the pressure sources, based on humanresources and liberty aspirations.
Accordingly, the product between humanresources and lack of freedom ranges theoretically from 0 to 100.
These trends causally have effects on health services and the economy as well as the use of humanresources and the emergence of new cultural patterns.
Much of the success of the political state was founded upon its ability to marshal economic and humanresources for what was perceived to be the common purpose.
In this context the conventional distinctions between natural resources, the environment and humanresources blur.
This monitoring process will require significant humanresources until the process becomes routine, and even then, since market forces affect salt distribution, close monitoring will need to continue.
Cash-in refers to the outlay of intellectual energy, humanresources, or money-and in most instances, all three-needed to proceed with launching a study or program of research.
Such problems likely result from the limited resources in terms of funding and humanresources within a single research institution that carried out the entire clinical study.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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