0 the act of moving employees, soldiers, equipment, etc. to a different place or using them in a more effective way:
1 the process of moving employees to a different job, or of sending them to work in a different place:
redeployment in/within sth Employees who have lost their jobs will be considered for redeployment elsewhere within the organization.
redeployment plans/options/opportunities
(the) redeployment of staff/workers/posts "It is inevitable that there will be some branch closures, redeployment of staff, and some redundancies," the CEO said.
2 the process of using money or other assets for a different purpose from the one they were originally intended for:
He has decided to continue with the redeployment of our forces.
The president is expected to endorse the redeployment plan this week.
This redeployment revealed the other motives for aid.
After 1918, financial constraints and new approaches to military planning required a redeployment of the military presence and the establishment of permanent garrisons.
This similar distribution has been reached by a redeployment of many neurons in the ensemble.
Viewed as a general redeployment of neuronal firing frequencies, it is clear that the integrated signal from a region can be increased, decreased, or remain unchanged.
Here, elites aim to control the agenda and resist changes through the development of a new issue and appropriation and redeployment of an accepted language of norms.