0 the basic systems, such as transport and communication, that a country or organization uses in order to work effectively -- infrastruktura
[ usually singular ] The country's infrastructure is in ruins.
For such a process to be a success, the right infrastructure, research design, people, partnerships, and funding need to be in place.
In other words, if these nations were to gain full independence there would already be a sort of national archaeological infrastructure at hand.
In order to analyse issues connected to the state's financial infrastructure, it is useful to draw upon the concept of ' corporate welfare'.
In many countries the existing infrastructure is overloaded and in bad repair, and services are unreliable and often expensive and infiltrated with corruption.
It also relied on extension infrastructure and an active farm consulting market to educate farmers.
The choice has been over-subjective and probably too heavily focused on health, disease, medicine, demography, urban infrastructure and public utilities.
Failures of large-scale infrastructure require extended periods of concentrated effort to repair, reducing the ability of the system to rapidly recover.
For open 'utility computing' autonomic environments, we will soon encounter the demand for a policy infrastructure, like those in our non-electronic, physical society.