CONI definition
Examples of CONI in a sentence
FIDAL is a member of both international athletics organisms (IAAF, the International Association of Athletics Federations, and EAA, the European Athletic Association), and CONI (Italian National Olympic Committee), the Confederation of Italian National Sports Federations.
The various roles covered by FIDAL include the formation of the national Italian teams that compete internationally at every level (for the Olympic Games, in collaboration with CONI), and the organization of the national championships, individual and club, for all associated categories.
Unbundled analog Loops are transmission paths capable of carrying analog voice frequency signals from the network interface (NI) on the end user’s premises to a USWC Central Office Network Interface (CO-NI).
IDSL Unbundled digital Loops are transmission paths capable of carrying specifically formatted and line coded digital signals from the NI on an end user’s premises to a Qwest CO-NI.
Some dispositions may vary from one federation to another as far as particular aspects of sports contracts (technical rules, procedural aspects, organising methods, etc) are concerned, but there is a common core of fundamental principles put forward by CONI that cannot be overlooked, let alone misapplied or ignored.
Methods: through the Institute of Sports Credit (also thanks to an upgrade of its regional offices) together with the Regional Committees of CONI, to strengthen the fund guarantee in favor of the Amateur Sports Associations and Societies, in order to make it really usable to allow the renovation or construction of sports facilities with its direct management.
Unbundled analog Loops are transmission paths capable of carrying analog voice frequency signals from the network interface (NI) on the end user’s premises to a USW Central Office Network Interface (CO-NI).
The national federations’ regulations are often the product of the adoption of general principles and provisions laid down by CONI in the performance of its role of supervising the activity and organisation of all federations.
Furthermore, all judicial proceedings before courts operating on behalf of all the federations should take into account a number of essential principles that CONI has borrowed from the general state law, such as the right to a fair and speedy trial, the due process clause, the double jeopardy rule, no hearsay rules etc.
It must also be taken into consideration that these proceedings can only be put in motion if all parties have previously agreed to take their disputes to an arbitration tribunal acting outside the ambit of the national sports federations (but well inside the general area covered by CONI).