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certificeurs

Certificeurs are entities authorized to assess and attest that a product, service, process or person conforms to defined standards or requirements. They issue certificates of conformity or eligibility that signal to customers, regulators or markets that the assessed item meets specified criteria. The term is used in both French and international contexts to describe bodies or individuals who perform evaluation, judgment and certification activities.

Certificateurs can take different forms. In many systems, they are formal certification bodies (organismes certificateurs) that

Process and standards. Certification typically follows a staged process: application, planning and scope definition, assessment (including

Regulation and risks. Certification activities are frequently regulated or overseen by government or independent authorities. Risks

operate
under
accreditation
from
national
or
international
bodies.
They
may
also
be
individual
certifiers
acting
on
behalf
of
a
certification
body.
Accreditation
and
impartiality
are
central
to
their
role,
ensuring
that
assessments
are
independent
and
competent.
Certification
bodies
commonly
work
across
sectors
such
as
quality
management,
environmental
management,
information
security,
and
product
safety.
Examples
of
recognized
fields
include
ISO
9001
(quality
management),
ISO
14001
(environmental
management),
ISO
27001
(information
security),
ISO
45001
(occupational
health
and
safety)
and
various
product
and
personnel
certifications.
document
review
and
on-site
audits
when
required),
evaluation
decision,
and
certificate
issuance.
Ongoing
conformity
is
maintained
through
surveillance
or
recertification
audits.
Certification
bodies
often
operate
according
to
international
standards,
such
as
ISO/IEC
17021-1
for
management
system
certification,
ISO/IEC
17065
for
product
certification,
and
ISO/IEC
17024
for
personnel
certification.
Accreditation
bodies
verify
the
competence
and
impartiality
of
certifieurs.
include
conflicts
of
interest,
insufficient
competence,
or
lack
of
transparency;
hence,
robust
governance,
clear
procedures,
and
accessible
appeals
are
essential
elements
of
credible
certifieurs.