Office of Standards and Regulations - translation to dutch
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Office of Standards and Regulations - translation to dutch

BRITISH GOVERNMENT AGENCY
Office of science and innovation; Office of Science and Innovation

Office of Standards and Regulations      
standaardinstituut (een instituut dat toezicht houdt op de kwaliteit van goederen en voedsel)
office equipment         
  • Shelves full of office supplies
  • A stationery box
ITEMS REGULARLY USED IN OFFICES BY BUSINESSES AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
Office supply; Office equipment; Office product; Office products; Office Supplies
bureaubenodigdheden (benodigdheden die nodig zijn in een bureau)
home office         
  • The former Home Office building at [[50 Queen Anne's Gate]], [[London]]
  • A Home Office Immigration Enforcement vehicle in north London
  • [[Lunar House]] in [[Croydon]], which holds the headquarters of [[UK Visas and Immigration]]
UNITED KINGDOM GOVERNMENT MINISTERIAL DEPARTMENT
Home Department; British Home Office; Home office; The Home office; Home Office Minister; United Kingdom Home Office; UK Home Office; The Home Office; Home Office, Her Britannic Majesty's Government; Home Office, His Britannic Majesty's Government; Home Office (UK); Home Office (England); Home Office (England and Wales); Home Office (United Kingdom)
thuisbureau (in Engeland)

Definition

OSTP
Office of Science and Technology Policy (Reference: org., USA)

Wikipedia

Office of Science and Technology

The Office of Science and Technology (OST), later (briefly) named the Office of Science and Innovation, was a non-ministerial government department of the British government between 1992 and 2007.

The office was responsible for co-ordination of the government's science and technology related activities and policies, and the distribution of some £2.4 billion among the seven UK Research Councils. It was headed by the Chief Scientific Adviser; initially this was Sir William Stewart, then Sir Robert May (later Lord May of Oxford), and finally Sir David King.

The OST was originally formed in 1992 as a merger of the Office of the Chief Scientific Adviser with the Science Branch of the Department of Education and Science (as it then was). Although originally run under the Cabinet Office, it was moved between departments in 1995 to operate under the Department of Trade and Industry. In early 2006, the office was renamed to the Office of Science and Innovation and was subsequently absorbed into the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills in the Summer of 2007 when the Department for Education and Skills was split in two.

The Government Chief Scientific Advisor now heads the Government Office for Science.