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HOW TO: Delegate Administrative Authority in Windows 2000Article ID: 315676 - View products that this article applies to. This article was previously published under Q315676 On This PageSUMMARY
This step-by-step article describes how to delegate administrative authority in Windows 2000. An administrator can use this feature in Windows 2000 to delegate administrative authority over one or more organizational units (OUs) to a user or group, without giving that user or group administrative authority throughout the domain. This increases the flexibility with which administrators can assign responsibility over a specified set of user/group accounts, printers, or other resources that can be placed into an organizational unit. Permissions that can be delegated include the permission to create and delete a particular type of object (such as user accounts) in an OU, permission to change the properties of the OU itself, or permissions to change properties of objects in the OU. A user to whom authority has been delegated can delegate his/her authority, or a subset of it, to another user or group. Delegating the Administrative AuthorityThe administrative tool that is used to delegate authority depends on the type of container or object involved. To delegate administrative authority over an OU or an entire domain, follow these steps on your Windows 2000 Server (or Windows 2000 Professional computer with the administrative tools installed):
For additional information about related topics, click the article numbers below to view the articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 221577
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/221577/EN-US/
)
How to Delegate Authority for Editing a Group Policy Object
275715
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/275715/EN-US/
)
How to Delegate Administration of Group Policies
308194
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308194/EN-US/
)
HOW TO: Create Domain Organizational Units
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