0 a building in which local government officials and employees work and have meetings
1 a public meeting at which a politician or official speaks about his or her policies and answers questions from members of the public:
2 a building in which local government officials and employees work and in which public meetings may be held
Guideline developers and stakeholders convene regularly in a series of town hall-style meetings in which a guideline advisory committee serves as executive body.
All six had their own civic authority and, by the late nineteenth century, their own town council and town hall.
The stocks, for example, were usually located in front of the town hall, and a jail cell inside served to imprison disobedient burghers.
Yet, most of them were weak, dominated by, and dependent upon, the town hall.
To varying extents, the local (nightclub, pub, town hall, or council) remains crucial in helping to articulate knowledges and practices existing within their own 'reason'.
We see little of the contemporary dynamics, whether in the neighbourhood, town hall or cabinet office.
They stood at the town gates and in front of the town hall.
In the public sphere, the town hall and other civic buildings together with the ritual and aggregated privileges and practices of incorporation presented a vision of municipal independence.