International Standards Organizations
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Broadly, an international standards organization is an international organization which develops international standards.
There are many international standards organizations, but the three international organizations having the highest international recognition are the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), and the International Telecommunication Union
(ITU). All three of these have existed for more than 50 years (founded
in 1947, 1906, and 1865, respectively) and they are all based in Geneva, Switzerland.
They have established tens of thousands of standards covering almost
every conceivable topic. Many of these are then adopted worldwide
replacing various incompatible 'homegrown' standards. Many of these
standards are naturally evolved from those designed in-house within an
industry, or by a particular country, whilst others have been built
from scratch by groups of experts who sit on various technical
committees (TCs).
ISO is composed of the National Standards Bodies (NSBs), one per member economy. The IEC
is composed of “National Committees”, one per member economy. In some
cases, the National Committee to the IEC of an economy may be the ISO
member from that country or economy.
The World Standards Cooperation (WSC) is a cooperative effort between ISO, the IEC, and the ITU.
ISO and IEC are non-treaty international organizations. Their members may be non-governmental organizations or governmental agencies. The ITU and Codex Alimentarius
are two examples of treaty-based organizations (where only governments
are the primary members). The members of these organizations are the
government foreign ministry, and/or appropriate regulatory body
(telecoms regulator, agricultural, food safety or pharmaceuticals
regulator, etc).
In addition to these organizations, there exist thousands of
standards organizations that set standards within some more specialized
context, such as IETF, W3C, IEEE or API.
Often, these international standards organizations are not based on the
principle of one member per country. Rather, membership in such
international organizations is more granular having either
organizational/corporate or individual technical expert members from
around the globe.
source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standards_Organizations#International_Standards_Organizations