A redirection of resources would be required. [+ of]
2. verb
If you redirect someone or something, you change their course or destination.
She redirected them to the men's department. [VERB noun]
redirectionuncountable noun
...the Royal Mail redirection service.
redirect in British English
(ˌriːdɪˈrɛkt, ˌriːdaɪ-)
verb(transitive)
to direct (someone or something) to a different place or by a different route
Derived forms
redirection (ˌrediˈrection)
noun
redirect in American English
(ˌridɪˈrɛkt; ˈridaɪˈrɛkt)
verb transitive
1.
to direct again or to a different place
adjective US
2. Law
designating the examination of one's own witness again, after cross-examination by the opposing lawyer
Derived forms
redirection (ˌrediˈrection)
noun
Examples of 'redirect' in a sentence
redirect
Attention is redirected towards the returns being earned.
Tom Cannon Basic Marketing. Principles and Practice (1986)
Another change in attention that comes with age is the ability to redirect attention quickly.
Siann, Gerda & Ugwuegbu, Denis C. E. Educational Psychology in a Changing World (1988)
This should be new money, not funds redirected from existing national budgets for overseas aid.
Times, Sunday Times (2009)
And with any luck, her post abolished and the money redirected into something useful.
The Sun (2015)
Although there are significant differences between them, all of these bodies have attempted to redirect publicly controlled funds to support their local economies.
Brindley,Tim & Rydin, Yvonne & Stoker, Gerry Remaking Planning: the politics of urban change in the Thatcher years (1989)
All CAP funds should be redirected into organic production.
Times, Sunday Times (2009)
The money should be redirected to pay for a backbone transplant for our Prime Minister.
The Sun (2014)
The new album is an attempt to redirect people's attention while keeping the qualities we've always had.
Times, Sunday Times (2008)
I seek instead to redirect attention from the animal trope's noisy human tenor back to its obscure furry vehicle '.
The Times Literary Supplement (2014)
I plan to move 10 per cent of our holdings to some targeted absolute return funds and redirect the monthly top-ups into these new funds.
Times, Sunday Times (2016)
In other languages
redirect
British English: redirect VERB
If you redirect your energy, resources, or ability, you begin doing something different or trying to achieve something different.
Controls were used to redistribute or redirect resources.