0 present participle of orchestrate --
1 to arrange or write a piece of music so that it can be played by an orchestra --
2 to arrange something carefully, and sometimes unfairly, so as to achieve a wanted result: --
They were orchestrating the opposition to what we were saying.
Competition between sources of energy and food is orchestrating their prices.
But there is certainly a role for local authorities in orchestrating these efforts, and the clause proposes just this.
Anderson (2002) proposes a five-stage interactive process that includes planning, selecting and using learning strategies, monitoring strategy use, orchestrating various strategies, and evaluating the strategies used.
Managerial care is multi-dimensional and the factor analysis identified two clear components: orchestrating care, and financial and bureaucratic management.
The factor structure indicates that care management is a distinct construct in care provision, and that it has two dimensions: orchestrating care, and financial and bureaucratic management.
Community nurses regularly act as care coordinators or mangers orchestrating the involvement of other services.
Secondly, the simple dichotomy between market and government is false - the issue in many sectors is orchestrating the role for each.