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incorporations
noun
Plural of incorporation
synonyms
Exact(18)
It means that the government wants to keep control of the biggest and most important companies, but will let the smaller ones fend for themselves.The following five years saw a wave of incorporations and stockmarket listings of SOEs, big and small, as the central government and the provinces sold minority stakes.
He wants to do that in two ways: first, by making other types of public data – including patents, copyrights and incorporations – "more interesting and accessible" to consumers.
The prospect of more Sandy Springs-style incorporations concerns people like Evan McKenzie, author of "Privatopia: Homeowner Associations and the Rise of Residential Private Government".
Delaware is the leading state for incorporations by public companies, and the five judges on Delaware's Chancery Court specialize in business disputes.
Even though TerraCycle is a small business with just under $20 million in revenue and just more than 100 employees, we are operating in more than 21 countries and we have plans to open in five more in the coming months — all with local staff, operations, bank accounts, incorporations and headaches.
Village incorporations are rare in New York State — there have been eight in the past two decades — but housing disputes are a common catalyst.
Similar(42)
Fees can be a powerful incentive; in Delaware, the state in which more American firms are incorporated than any other, incorporation fees provide one-fifth of the state's tax revenues.Even supposing that the SEC is as keen to serve securities issuers as any state would be, competition should mean better regulation.
But he now hopes (see article ) to show in court that the Official Secrets Act is not compatible with the right to free expression set out in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), which the Human Rights Act incorporates into British law.In theory, incorporation does not confer any new rights.
Before the 1997 general election, both parties had committed themselves to the incorporation of the European convention on human rights into British law, to a Freedom of Information Act and to devolution of powers to Scotland and to a lesser extent Wales.
And, of course, the reason why even these types of restrictions can end up in our courts and be struck down, is that this Government gave British citizens for the first time ever the power to challenge Executive action or legislation, through the incorporation of the European Convention.
The attorney general, Dominic Grieve, has strongly opposed British withdrawal from the ECHR, and was one of the few Tories to admit he had been "broadly comfortable" about its incorporation into UK statute law, which came through the Human Rights Act.
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