0 present participle of delegate
1 to give a particular job, duty, right, etc. to someone else so that they do it for you:
2 to choose or elect someone to speak, vote, etc. for a group, especially at a meeting:
A group of four teachers were delegated to represent their colleagues at the union conference.
Other professionals (nurses and medical physicists) held a reserved view in delegating their tasks to radiographers, even after accredited clinical training.
Nothing in the theory contradicts a notion that delegating great powers to an independently elected executive may lead that executive to amass still greater powers.
Linked to the issue of only delegating nonvolatile or established care is the need for the delegator to have confidence in their delegation decision-making.
The aim of delegating routine or assessed patient need was not always easy to achieve.
Previous authoritarian governments had perfected the art of delegating a portion of society's welfare demands to the corporate sector and the family.
To sum up, none of the professions have shown particular willingness in delegating their responsibilities to competent radiographers.
The external mechanisms enable modification of the system's behaviour to be initiated by its environment, for example, by imposing constraints, enforcing rules and delegating artifacts.
For example, we talk of delegating to agents, or agents collaborating with each other in agent societies.