0 the act or process of deciding officially that someone should continue in a particular job:
How the physician's performance affects the hospital's financial viability may play a role in that physician's reappointment to staff (56).
More significantly, in only nineteen of the sixty-seven cases is the committee reappointment rate equal to or greater than 50 per cent.
Under current legislation, senators are required to sit out for a term before reappointment.
It gives the opportunity for those important people, the chief executive officers of the trade unions, to come up for periodic reappointment or re-election.
Surely he could easily create an atmosphere where trustees just rubber stamp his reappointment.
When questions are asked, is it a sufficient answer that the person who made the reappointment took advice on it?
This will apply to all current postholders seeking reappointment as well as new candidates.
Naturally, one accepts that in the reappointment of governors there will always be a certain number who are anxious to retire.