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The phrase "authorise decisions" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where someone is given the power or permission to make decisions on behalf of others or within an organization.
Example: "The manager has the authority to authorise decisions regarding budget allocations for the project."
Alternatives: "approve decisions" or "empower decisions".
Exact(1)
At any major port of entry, operational managers have to manage staff, deal with the public, authorise decisions, and complete more than 40 different paper and electronic logs every shift – simply so that more managers not directly involved in operational activity can be assured the job is being done.
Similar(59)
"So we have launched a legal challenge against the authorising decision".
The Scottish National party called on the Conservatives to "come clean" about who authorised spending decisions at the 2015 election and suggested the party may have "fraudulently won with a coordinated breach of electoral legislation".
"If the supreme court has authorised the decision to evacuate people, it's something we should do.
A "728" form, used by the Met, bears the name of the senior officer who authorised the decision to covertly record Brooks.
But in this model of argumentation, it is inconceivable to justify euthanasia unless the newborn's status as a person has been fundamentally contested…Utilitarianist reasoning can nevertheless be tempered by stressing the importance of respect for the dignity of the newborn and by responding to their needs, and it would authorise pro-active decisions depending on what is truly possible.
The Council of the EU adopted decisions authorising the EU to open negotiations for free trade agreements with both Australia and New Zealand on 22 May 2018.
Unless one is prepared to accept that any planning decision authorises any nuisance which must inevitably come from it, the argument that the nuisance was authorised by planning permission in this case must fail".
The council also had to make a decision to authorise that.
Downing Street has said that William Hague took the decision to authorise the botched MI6/SAS mission to Libya.
William Hague, the foreign secretary, took the decision to authorise the botched MI6/SAS mission to Libya, Downing Street said.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com