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Since its establishment, ONS has had five Directors: professor Tim Holt; Len Cook; Karen Dunnell; Jil Matheson; and, from October 2012, Glen Watson. Len Cook was the first Director to hold the newly created role of National Statistician.
Cook took up the post of National Statistician and Director of the Office for National Statistics at the end of May 2000. [2] He was the second head of the ONS but the first to have the title of National Statistician. He returned to New Zealand and was succeeded by Karen Dunnell in September 2005. [4]
The UK Statistics Authority (UKSA, Welsh: Awdurdod Ystadegau'r DU) is a non-ministerial government department of the Government of the United Kingdom responsible for oversight of the Office for National Statistics, maintaining a national code of practice for official statistics, and accrediting statistics that comply with the Code as National Statistics.
It was a forerunner and constituent, with the UK Central Statistical Office, of the Office for National Statistics, in which they combined in 1996 under a single director who, from 2000 was also known as the National Statistician. The director of OPCS was also Registrar-General for England and Wales.
ONS or Ons may refer to: ONS (TV channel), Netherlands and Belgium; Ons Island, Spain; Ons Jabeur, Tunisian tennis player; Oberste Nationale Sportbehörde ('Supreme National Sports Authority'), German body now named Deutscher Motor Sport Bund; Object Naming Service, similar to Domain Name Service (DNS) Occipital nerve stimulation, a medical ...
The Oncology Nursing Society (ONS) is a nonprofit membership organization of more than 35,000 members committed to promoting excellence in oncology nursing [1] [2] and the transformation of cancer care.
The National Office of Statistics (NOS, [6] French: Office National des Statistiques, ONS, Arabic: الديوان الوطني للإحصائيات) is the Algerian ministry charged with the collection and publication of statistics related to the economy, population, and society of Algeria at national and local levels.
Arlene Blum (born March 1, 1945 [1]) is an American mountaineer, writer, and environmental health scientist. She is best known for leading the first successful American ascent of Annapurna (I), a climb that was also an all-woman ascent.