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Comitê

A comité is a formal body composed of individuals appointed or elected to consider, study, or decide on specific matters within an organization, government, or institution. Its mandate is usually defined by a charter, statute, policy, or resolution, and it operates with a defined scope, reporting lines, and a set schedule of meetings. The goal of a comité is to focus expertise and share responsibility for a defined domain, rather than to act as a general decision-making body.

In many languages the term exists in cognate forms: French comité, Spanish comité, Portuguese comitê, Italian

Comités typically have a chair or president, a secretary or clerk, and a defined membership. They may

Common types include standing committees (ongoing responsibilities such as governance or finance), select or special committees

Comités are central to parliamentary procedure, corporate governance, universities, and civil society. The effectiveness of a

comitato,
and
English
committee.
The
word
derives
from
a
root
related
to
entrusting
tasks
to
a
group
of
people,
reflecting
the
cooperative
nature
of
collective
decision-making.
convene
regular
meetings,
maintain
minutes,
and
produce
recommendations
or
reports.
Authority
may
be
advisory,
or
it
may
include
decision
power
delegated
by
a
higher
body.
Some
comités
are
permanent
(standing),
while
others
are
temporary
(ad
hoc
or
special).
Joint
comités
involve
multiple
organizations
or
departments.
(temporary
investigations),
steering
committees
(project
direction),
and
advisory
committees
(expert
input
without
formal
decision
power).
comité
depends
on
a
clear
mandate,
adequate
resources,
transparent
processes,
and
accountability
mechanisms.
Critics
point
to
potential
duplication,
scope
creep,
and
delays
when
authority
is
ill
defined.