Examples of EU Publications Office in a sentence
A possible explanation as to why this phrase is no longer explicitly stated above a legislative act is the fact that EU citizens are now far more informed than they were before so that there is no need to point it out.In order to get to the truth, an inquiry has been sent to the Helpdesk of the EU Publications Office.
It requires publication of notices to be sent to the EU Publications Office.
Looking to the longer term the Agency started to draft its future options for publications and in this connection has checked the facilities available from the EU Publications Office and private sector suppliers.
The EU Publications Office (OP) pro- vides Named Authority Lists (NAL) which are vocabularies to standardize the inter-institutional legal data exchange.
EU Publications Office, Luxembourg (2017), ISBN 978-92-79-63185-6.
In accordance with the requirements of the Regulations, the Authority will send contract award notices to the EU Publications Office for publication, based on the Orders submitted by the Supplier in their MI Reports.
Parisi (2020), Distribution of the bio-based industry in the EU, Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg, 2020, ISBN 978-92-76-16408-1, doi:10.2760/745867, JRC119288.
Agnieszka Zajac and Marc Kuster (EU Publications Office) presented respectively the EU Open Data Portal, illustrating the technologies implemented to make EU datasets open, and the CELLAR semantic repository to make legal documents from the EC semantically accessible.
Willem Van Gemert (EU Publications Office) and Johannes Keizer (FAO) presented two platforms for vocabularies: the vocabulary management tool VocBench (used for both AGROVOC and Eurovoc) and the vocabulary framework Global Agricultural Concept Scheme (GACS), a common environment for hosting, linking, referencing and publishing vocabularies for food and agriculture.
Managed by the EU Publications Office, this official database includes all EU laws, preparatory documents, legislative histories and Parliamentary questions, dating back to 1951.