Crossword clues for recruitment
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Recruitment \Re*cruit"ment\ (-ment), n. The act or process of recruiting; especially, the enlistment of men for an army.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1795, from recruit (v.) + -ment.
Wiktionary
n. 1 The process or art of finding candidates for a post in an organization, or of recruits for the armed forces 2 A style or process of recruiting
WordNet
n. the act of getting recruits; enlisting people for the army (or for a job or a cause etc.) [syn: enlisting]
Wikipedia
Recruitment (hiring) is a core function of human resource management. Recruitment refers to the overall process of attracting, selecting and appointing suitable candidates for jobs (either permanent or temporary) within an organization. Recruitment can also refer to processes involved in choosing individuals for unpaid positions, such as voluntary roles or unpaid trainee roles. Managers, human resource generalists and recruitment specialists may be tasked with carrying out recruitment, but in some cases public-sector employment agencies, commercial recruitment agencies, or specialist search consultancies are used to undertake parts of the process. Internet-based technologies to support all aspects of recruitment have become widespread.
Recruitment is the process of filling vacancies with people.
Recruitment or recruiting may also refer to:
- Recruitment (biology), the process of developing the next generation of organisms
- College recruiting, the process in college athletics whereby coaches add new players to their roster
- Military recruitment, the process of requesting people to join a military voluntarily
- Motor unit recruitment, the progressive activation of a muscle
- The 17th century English process of filling vacant parliamentary seats during recruiter elections
In biology, especially marine biology, recruitment occurs when juvenile organisms survive to be added to a population, by birth or immigration, usually a stage whereby the organisms are settled and able to be detected by an observer.
There are two types of recruitment: closed and open.
In the study of fisheries, recruitment is "the number of fish surviving to enter the fishery or to some life history stage such as settlement or maturity."
Usage examples of "recruitment".
As one consequence of this pattern, the significant armies have continued to be small and usually based on voluntary recruitment, intended for deployment outside their native systems.
Others of your kind have for a variety of reasons recruitment refused.
An individual who refuses recruitment will later another of our people encounter and ask to join.
Garcia was speaking of Hugh Oberon, who had been recommended for recruitment by the head of the Riviera area.
Von Krankin and I have exclusive responsibility for recruitment, training and ops.
Celestian government gave in: promised to close down recruitment operations, help rehabilitate brainwashed Mandasars by bringing them back into mixed-caste hives, and recognize me as a sort of a kind of a spokesman for all Mandasars on the planet.
The only system and method in such countries is applied to the army, the tax collector, and recruitment for the harem.
Jamal behind bars, but it was enough for a gang-plank recruitment a la the Great Hew-Chatworth.
The agent recruitment process operated under many of the same precepts.
The recruitment planets aligned, Malik stalked until the time was right.
You love it when a false-flag recruitment produces a twenty-four-karat nugget.
Klein-Schul, Pierce recalled that fertility was another inbred Hutterite quality, and one which would have made them candidates for deportation even if they had not resisted recruitment of their Trainable children.
Having two pairs would make recruitment a more viable option than just having the one.
She had done extremely well in Flaps and Seals as well as Picks and Locks, and had scored high marks in the Essentials of Recruitment and Advanced Ciphers and Communist Theory and Practice.
So the Relatives okay top-level recruitment in the scientific community, under their own careful eye.