A professional association (also called a professional body, professional organization, or professional society) is a non-profit organization seeking to further a particular profession, the interests of individuals engaged in that profession, and the public interest.

The roles of these professional associations have been variously defined: "A group of people in a learned occupation who are entrusted with maintaining control or oversight of the legitimate practice of the occupation;" also a body acting "to safeguard the public interest;" organizations which "represent the interest of the professional practitioners," and so "act to maintain their own privileged and powerful position as a controlling body."

Such bodies generally strive to achieve a balance between these two often conflicting mandates. Though professional bodies often act to protect the public by maintaining and enforcing standards of training and ethics in their profession, they often also act like a cartel or a labor union (trade union) for the members of the profession, though this description is commonly rejected by the body concerned.

Therefore, in certain dispute situations the balance between these two aims may get tipped more in favor of protecting and defending the professionals than in protecting the public. An example can be used to illustrate this. In a dispute between a lawyer and his/her client or between a patient and his/her doctor, the Law Society of England and Wales or the General Medical Council will inevitably find itself plunged into a conflict of interest in (a) its wish to defend the interests of the client, while also (b) wishing to defend the interests, status and privileges of the professional. It is clearly a tough call for it do both.

Many professional bodies are involved in the development and monitoring of professional educational programs, and the updating of skills, and thus perform professional certification to indicate that a person possesses qualifications in the subject area. Sometimes membership of a professional body is synonymous with certification, though not always. Membership of a professional body, as a legal requirement, can in some professions form the primary formal basis for gaining entry to and setting up practice within the profession; see licensure.

Many professional bodies also act as learned societies for the academic disciplines underlying their professions.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Thu Feb 4 23:22:06 2010

Louise's UK Recruiter Blog: Results of the Voyager Professional ...
ukrecruiter.typepad.com
Louise's UK Recruiter Blog: Results of the Voyager Professional ...

Louise Triance

ue, 15 Sep 2009 09:42:13 GM

A little while back we ran a survey with Voyager around the topic of . professional bodies. . Especially pertinent as there has been quite a lot of discussion (both in a post here and on the forum) about the new IRP...

To: Premier Gordon Campbell/Letter from C. Graves, RN
partnerships2009.blogspot.com
To: Premier Gordon Campbell/Letter from C. Graves, RN

Partnerships2009

Mon, 02 Nov 2009 16:55:00 GM

As you know, all professionals on health care teams across BC and Canada have regulatory . professional bodies. that stand behind them to ensure that standardization​ of best practice and accountability are protected through policies, ...

Role? Discipline? Knowledge? Definition? What do we need from a ...
magia3e.wordpress.com
Role? Discipline? Knowledge? Definition? What do we need from a ...

magia3e

ue, 03 Nov 2009 07:27:13 GM

It also means . professional bodies. may be turning away the very people who are able to transform their organisations. Take Information Architecture, for example. The president of the Information Architecture Institute during 2008, ...

From Google Blog Search: "professional bodies"
Sat Nov 14 15:42:57 2009

d000045 jpg
che.ac.za
d000045 jpg
171px x 120px | 3.90kB

[source page]

Section E Appendices 200Kb ~ 1 min Overview of the Directory The Directory highlights the various organisations with some or other kind of HE quality assurance responsibility It reveals a mix of diverse bodies that

bodies12 jpg
ifbbpro.com
bodies12 jpg
300px x 200px | 16.50kB

[source page]



Imech CIEE6 jpg
fgwilson.com
Imech CIEE6 jpg
360px x 240px | 27.80kB

[source page]

FG Wilson First In NI To Receive Double Engineering Certification FG Wilson s training programme for graduate engineers is the first of its kind in Northern Ireland to be accredited by

From Yahoo Image Search: "professional bodies"
Mon Jul 13 04:16:07 2009

Does becoming extremely lean and muscular like a professional body builder get rid of cellulite?
Q. I ask because I constantly see before and afters of female professional body builders. In the before, they're either flubby and skinny, average, or overweight. So, of course, they have to have cellulite. In the after pictures, there is not a bit of fat or cellulite on them. Does becoming so lean and muscular get rid of cellulite? Example:
Asked by JJ - Tue Aug 21 08:42:19 2007 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. no
Answered by ~Del Fresco~ - Tue Aug 21 09:14:28 2007

Do professional body builders wax or shave their bodies?
Q. Do professional body builders wax or shave their bodies?
Asked by is_more2life - Wed Feb 1 01:05:06 2006 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Well on MTV's True Life: I'm a Bodybuilder, the guy would have his Dad shave his whole body a day or two before a competition. They look so shiny because they put a lot of oil on.
Answered by danefredericksen - Wed Feb 1 01:07:09 2006

Members of professional bodies...e.g. accountants, Lawyers etc.?
Q. Despite being fully qualified I have to pay a fee to my Institute to remain with them, and to be able to use the letters after my name. As I never use the letters apart from on my CV, and I only get 12 magazines each year (which I seldom read) for my money, should I just stop paying the fees and forget the institute? Miss Behavin - My career has progressed, and I have branched out into a wider sphere so that I no longer need to keep up to date with the small details which are in the magazines. If I do need to know anything in detail I have the means to find out the specific information which I require. I find the magazines mostly irrelevant to the work I am now involved in.
Asked by Copper - Sun Oct 8 16:32:33 2006 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments

A. My father is a Mechanical Engineer and when I was a kid his business cards had a whole dictionary's worth of letters after his name. Over time he got fed up with paying all the subscriptions, and now all he has is MIMe MECHe, or something like that, after his name. Doesn't matter to him though, because everyone in his industry knows him and he gets by on reputation and skill. Basically, what I'm saying is don't get rid of your letters unless you feel your ability and reputation is strong enough to cope without them in your industry.
Answered by alfie - Sun Oct 8 18:58:32 2006

From Yahoo Answer Search: "professional bodies"
Thu Jul 9 08:51:46 2009