ACDA Superior Honor Award
ACDA Superior Honor Award | |
---|---|
Type | Medal |
Eligibility | Foreign Service, Civil Service, US Military |
Status | Obsolete |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | ACDA Distinguished Honor Award |
Next (lower) | ACDA Meritorious Honor Award |
The Superior Honor Award is an award of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, an independent agency charged with implementing and verifying arms control strategies which has since been merged into the Department of State. Similar versions of the same award exist for the United States Agency for International Development, the Department of State, and the former U.S. Information Agency. This award has been replaced with the State Department's Superior Honor Award. This award was presented to groups or individuals in recognition of a special act or service or sustained extraordinary performance covering a period of one year or longer.
The award consists of a certificate signed by an assistant secretary, an official of equivalent rank or the ACDA Director.
Criteria
The following criteria are applicable to granting a Superior Honor Award:[1]
- Contributions, which had a substantial impact on the accomplishment of the agency’s missions, goals, or objectives;
- Accomplishments, which substantially contributed to the advancement of U.S. Government interests;
- Exceptional performance in one or more areas of the employee’s official duties as defined in the Work Requirements Statement (Foreign Service) or Performance Plan (Civil Service);
- Innovation and creativity in accomplishing long-term tasks or projects;
- Contributions that resulted in increased productivity and efficiency, and economy of operations at agency level; and/or
- Exceptional devotion to duty under adverse conditions.
Military Use
Upon authorization, members of the U.S. military may wear the medal and ribbon in the appropriate order of precedence as a U.S. non-military personal decoration.
References
- ^ "3 FAM 4827 Superior Honor Award". US Department of State. 31 January 2003. Retrieved 12 Jan 2016.