0 with the protection or support of someone or something, especially an organization:
Financial aid is being provided to the country under the auspices of the International Monetary Fund.
1 approval, support, and control:
Relief volunteers worked under the auspices of the Red Cross.
2 with the protection or support of something, especially an organization:
The negotiations are being conducted under the auspices of the WTO.
At a future point, the perspective could be expanded to other developed and developing countries under the auspices of existing international governmental organizations.
The book has been produced under auspices that ought to ensure high quality.
Under the auspices of the state, the informal world of gift relationships swiftly becomes a network of formal rights and obligations.
The journal includes also occasional reports from research groups on their projects conducted under the auspices of applied lingustics organisations and university departments.
This work was not carried out under the auspices of the fellowship.
The revealed, coercive, and relational forms are taken to be fundamentally the same, and are therefore summarized under the auspices of 'direct power'.
Networks and their tentacles are exposed throughout the book, which illustrate how much business was transacted through the auspices of civil society.
An agricultural economy held sway until the growth of oil exporting in the 1920s under the auspices of the multinationals (pp. 144, 158).