Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2. 7 | cities, depending on their infrastructure and their size. However,
2 I, 2. 9 | natural hazards and damage to infrastructure and changes in river flows
3 II, 5. 3. 6| to 68%).~Cancer-service infrastructure, prevention and screening
4 II, 5. 4. 2| development of an information infrastructure allowing constant monitoring
5 II, 5. 4. 7| build “a common European infrastructure for standardized information
6 II, 5. 4. 7| the definition of a common infrastructure. However, they cannot directly
7 II, 5. 5.Int| Regional policy supports infrastructure investments in the health
8 II, 5. 5. 3| aimed at establishing the infrastructure of a European clinical research
9 II, 5. 9. 5| initiatives into its operating infrastructure (Loeppke, 1999). The strategic
10 II, 5. 9. 5| CPI-oriented organizational infrastructure, providing access to performance
11 II, 5. 15. 5| concentration/pooling of resources (infrastructure and knowledge) or expertise;
12 II, 8. 2. 2| resource development, and infrastructure and technology. Although
13 II, 8. 2. 2| workforce with an enabling infrastructure and technology. The prevention
14 III, 10. 2. 4| Rare diseases require a specific infrastructure and a solid cooperation
15 III, 10. 2. 4| fundamental changes and a new infrastructure. The more individual prevention
16 III, 10. 3. 1| noise exposure from traffic infrastructure, industry, trade and shooting
17 III, 10. 4. 1| sulphur content fuel, poor infrastructure and maintenance, and a declining
18 III, 10. 5. 1| parking lots and other public infrastructure seal off the ground and
19 III, 10. 5. 1| environmental conditions, infrastructure or services. The directives
20 III, 10. 6. 2| the economies and health infrastructure of countries and regions
21 IV, 11. 6. 5| of Solidarity: the Moral Infrastructure of Interpersonal Redistributions -
22 IV, 12. 10 | communities as improved local infrastructure (e. g. cycle paths, public