Judo (Japanese: 柔道, jūdō; "gentle way") is a martial art and combat sport, which originated in Japan. Judo, now primarily a sport, is a system of unarmed combat. The objective is to throw, pin, or cause the opponent to yield by applying pressure to arm joints or the neck.
ICH Guidelines are adopted by regulatory authorities and published on the ICH website. ICH also produces a standardised reference tool for medical terminology (MedDRA) in 27 languages and electronic standards for the transfer of regulatory information (ESTRI).
ICH HARMONISED GUIDELINE GUIDELINE FOR GOOD CLINICAL PRACTICE E6(R3) INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL FOR HARMONISATION OF TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS FOR PHARMACEUTICALS FOR HUMAN USE
The International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) brings together regulatory authorities and the pharmaceutical industry to discuss the scientific and technical aspects of pharmaceutical development.
Judo (Japanese: 柔道, Hepburn: Jūdō; lit. 'gentle way') is an unarmed modern Japanese martial art, combat sport, Olympic sport (since 1964), Paralympic sport (since 1988) and Commonwealth Games sport (since 1990).
The official International Judo Federation website - IJF - is the judo hub for all the judo community members as well as those exploring the sport of judo. Judo is an Olympic sport since 1964.
Judo is a martial art and combat sport focused on throws, pins, joint locks, and submissions. Matches are divided by weight class and typically last four minutes, with overtime if needed. As students develop skills, they gain confidence, independence, and belief in their abilities.
Judo, system of unarmed combat, now primarily a sport. The rules of the sport of judo are complex. The objective is to cleanly throw, to pin, or to master the opponent, the latter being done by applying pressure to arm joints or to the neck to cause the opponent to yield.