European Fencing Confederation
The European Fencing Confederation (EFC; French: Confédération européenne d'escrime, CEE) is an international body created in 1991, charged with the promotion and development of fencing in Europe. It organises the European Fencing Championships annually at several levels: cadets (U17), junior (U20), under 23, seniors and veterans (more than 40 years old).
Abbreviation | EFC |
---|---|
Formation | 1991 |
Type | Sports organisation |
Headquarters | Luxembourg |
Region served | Europe |
Official language | English, French |
Website | eurofencing.info |
The Confederation comprises all national European fencing federations, plus that of Israel, and is under the authority of FIE.
History and goals
It was founded on 26 October 1991 in Vienna, Austria, and is based in Luxembourg at the headquarters of the Luxembourg Fencing Federation.
Its goals are:
- promotion and development of fencing in Europe;
- facilitate technical collaboration between the different federations;
- co-ordination and improvement of the teaching of fencing in Europe;
- representation of fencing to European authorities;
- organisation of the European Fencing Championships.
Organs
The organs of the EFC comprise:
- the General Assembly—the supreme organ of the Confederation, composed of delegates appointed by the member federations;
- the Executive Committee (COMEX)—composed of 10 members elected by the General Assembly, each from a different federation;
- the President;
- two Auditors.
Commissions
The COMEX elects the members of nine commissions that deal with specialised areas:
- Competition Commission;
- Veterans Commission;
- Promotion/Marketing Commission;
- Referees Commission;
- Training/Fencing Masters Commission;
- SEMI Commission;
- Athletes Commission;
- Finance Commission;
- Handicapped Commission.
gollark: Really? It has iterators, doesn't it?
gollark: Hmm, what if haskell but rust?
gollark: Yes, then. Just trying to be clear.
gollark: Do you want every language to be Haskell?
gollark: PRs welcome!
External links
- European Fencing Confederation (EFC), official site
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.