Public stakeholder definition

Public stakeholder means an individual, association, organization or other entity (and any owner of an interest in any such entity) with any interest, direct or indirect, in a matter, whether such interest is financial, contractual, legal,
Public stakeholder means members of the public including residents, environmentalists, community leaders, public officials, citizens’ action groups, and any other interested party.

Examples of Public stakeholder in a sentence

  • The activities of the Devolution Programme Board will be informed by:  The support requirements of the devolution pilots;  Negotiated devolution of powers, resources and decision-making from national bodies and central government; and  Public, stakeholder and expert engagement.

  • Additionally, Public, stakeholder, and Core Team engagement must be a documented part of the report development and included in the final recommendations put forward based on the findings.

Related to Public stakeholder

  • Stakeholder means a person who owns shares in the company and is actively involved in the management of the company or business and exercises control over the company.

  • Stakeholders means the company’s employees, the employees of its subsidiaries, and other individuals, groups, communities or entities whose rights or interests are or could be affected by the products, services and operations of that company, its subsidiaries and its business relationships;

  • Public statement means a statement made in the ordinary course of business of the public body with the intent that all other members of the public body receive it.

  • Public schools means the schools and other institutions mentioned in subsection

  • Public Source means each source of Publicly Available Information specified as such in the Issue Terms (or, if a source is not so specified, each of Bloomberg Service, Dow Jones Telerate Service, Reuter Monitor Money Rates Services, Dow Jones News Wire, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Nihon Keizai Shinbun, Asahi Shinbun, Yomiuri Shinbun, Financial Times, La Tribune, Les Echos and The Australian Financial Review (and successor publications), the main source(s) of business news in the country in which the Reference Entity is organised and any other internationally recognised published or electronically displayed news sources).