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Kenzo Ratliff posted an update 4 years, 2 months ago
Organization ISO’s organizational structures include: ISO General Assembly, main officials, member groups, correspondent members, donor members, policy development committee, conformity assessment committee (CASCO), customer policy committee (COPOLCO), creating country affairs committee (DEVCO), Special Advisory Group, Technical Administration, Technical Committee TC, Council, Central Secretariat, and so on. The ISO organizational structure is shown in the figure beneath: ISO’s organizational structure is divided into non-permanent institutions and permanent institutions. ISO’s highħest authority is the ISO Common Assembly, which is a non-standard organization of ISO. Prior to 1994, the common meeting was held each three years. When the plenary meeting is held, all ISO group members, correspondent members, and international organizations that have liaison with ISO will send representatives to the meeting. Every member has three seats for official representatives, and much more than three representatives will attend the meeting as observers The size of the general assembly is about 200-260 individuals. The main agenda of the conference consists of the activities of the relevant projects involved in the annual report, ISO’s strategic plan and financial situation. The ISO Central Secretariat is accountable for the work of the Secretariat of the General Assembly, the four Policy-making Committees, the Council, the Technical Administration and the General Standardization Principles Committee established by the General Assembly. Since 1994, according to the new ISO regulations, the ISO common meeting has been changed to as soon as a year. There are 5 main ISO officials, they are: ISO President (President) ISO Vice President (Policy) (Vice President, Policy), ISO Vice President (Technical Management) (Vice President, Technical Management) ISO Treasurer (Treasurer) ISO Secretary-Common (Secretary-General), all principal officials are appointed by the board of directors and appreciate a lifetime term the ISO Secretary-Common is accountable for presiding more than the daily work of ISO. Technical activityISO’s technical activity is to formulate and publish International Standards (International Requirements). ISO’s work involves standardization activities in numerous technical fields except electrical standards. Following getting into the 1990s, standardization function in the field of communication technologies showed a fast development trend and became an essential component of international standardization activities. ISO has strengthened cooperation and coordination with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and the International Info Union (ITU). The 3 organizations have joined with each other to form the core of standardization function worldwide. ISO and IEC jointly formulated the “ISO/IEC Technical Work Guidelines”, which stipulated a series of particulars from the establishment of the organization to the appointment of personnel and the responsibilities of every individual, and the technical work of ISO from the international level to the national level (Member body ) Level to the Technical Committee (TC), Sub-Committee (SC), and finally to the Working Group (WG) to form a whole unit, therefore ensuring this has 140 member states , 2850 technical committees, sub-committees and operating groups and 30,000 specialists participate in the efficient operation of a huge international organization. ISO has issued nearly 14,000 international standards, technical reports and related recommendations, and they are nonetheless growing. In order to formulate these requirements, an average of 15 ISO meetings are held around the globe every working day. ISO’s function has aroused the interest of numerous international organizations and companies can use their ISO 45001 certification to apply for BizSAFE status in Singapore. You like bizSAFE Level? So do we!