RPA may refer to:
Random Phase Approximation, an approximation used in physics.A Registered
Physician assistant.Ruby Production Archive.
RNase protection assay.Replication protein A, a protein that binds to single-stranded
DNA. In Australia:
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, a large hospital in Sydney.
RPA (TV series), a reality television show that is filmed at the hospital. In Canada:Registered Public Accountant, a professional accounting association with members across Canada In Ireland:
Railway Procurement Agency, a state agency that builds railways. In Rwanda:The
Rwandan Patriotic Army, the army that overthrew the Rwandan government during the 1994 Rwandan Genocide In the United States:
RPA (Rubin Postaer and Associates), the largest independent advertising agency in the west coast of the United States.The
Richmond Progressive Alliance, a liberal political group in California.Register of Professional Archaeologists (formally ROPA),
http://www.rpanet.org/A listing of archaeologists who have agreed to abide by an explicit code of conduct and standards of research performance, who hold a graduate degree in archaeology, anthropology, art history, classics, history, or another germane discipline and who have substantial practical experience.The
Regional Plan Association, an independent, not-for-profit New York-New Jersey-Connecticut regional planning organization.The
ICAO code for
Republic Airlines. In the United Kingdom:The
Representation of the People Acts (governing election law) or one thereof.The
Romanized Popular Alphabet a common
romanization of the
Hmong language.The
Rural Payments Agency, an executive agency of the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).
See more at Wikipedia.org...
Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act of 1974.
Provides authority to the Forest Service to prepare and update an assessment every 10 years to inventory and monitor the status and trends of the forest lands and range lands in the National Forest System, and to prepare a long-range plan every 5 years to guide Forest Service policies.