توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Debates in Charity Law
نام کتاب : Debates in Charity Law
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : بحث در حقوق خیریه
سری :
نویسندگان : John Picton, Jennifer Sigafoos (editors)
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 329
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509926831 , 9781509926855
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Acknowledgements\nTable of Contents\nList of Contributors\n1. Fault Lines in Charity Law\n I. Debates in Charity Law\n II. Old Law, New Shoes\n III. Specific Regulatory Contexts for Charities\n IV. Conclusion\n2. Independence and Accountability in the Charity Sector\n I. Introduction\n II. Diversity, Voluntarism, and the Independence of the Charity Sector\n III. Charity Accountability and Sector Independence from the State\n IV. Conclusion\n3. Debating the Extent of Party/State Control Over Overseas Nonprofit Organisations: Charity Law Debates in China\n I. Introduction: Fault Lines in Chinese Charity Law\n II. Delineating the Fault Lines: China’s Relationships with Overseas NGOs, Foundations and Think Tanks\n III. From Fault Lines to Decisions: Making the Policy Decision for a Much More Controlling Policy, 2012 to the Present\n IV. The Party/State and Overseas Nongovernmental Organisations Since 2012\n V. Beyond Extended Control: Areas of Continued Policy Decision-Making - But Not Much Debate\n VI. When the Debates are Over: A New Typology of Overseas Nongovernmental Organisations in China\n VII. Conclusion\n4. Regulating Egoism in Perpetuity\n I. Introduction\n II. Donative Economics and Legal Scholarship\n III. Theorising Egoism in Connection with Legal Perpetuity\n IV. A Justification for Founder Plan-Protection\n V. An Analytical Role for Altruism\n VI. A Legal-Conceptual Method for Policy Compromise\n VII. Conclusion\n5. Deploying Communitarianism Bankruptcy Theory to Rescue Insolvent Charities and Maintain Charitable Purposes\n I. Introduction\n II. Communitarianism and the For-Profit Corporation\n III. Communitarianism and Non-Profit Corporations\n IV. Insolvent Charitable Corporations, Rescue and ‘Adapted Cy-près’\n V. Conclusion\n6. When Should Charities be Allowed to Discriminate? The Case of Single-Sex Services and Transgender People\n I. Introduction\n II. Charities and Discrimination\n III. Justifying Charitable Discrimination\n IV. When should Charities be able to Discriminate?\n V. Conclusion\n7. Regulating Charitable Activities through the Requirement for Charitable Purposes: Square Peg Meets Round Hole\n I. Introduction\n II. Case Study: Bob Jones University v United States\n III. Doing ‘Charity’ – Purposes versus Activities\n IV. Public Benefit and Activities\n V. Conclusion\n8. Redefining the Regulatory Space? The First Forays of the Irish Charities Regulatory Authority\n I. Introduction: The Difficult Births of Charity Regulators\n II. The Irish Regulatory Landscape Pre-2014\n III. Introducing the New Kid on the Block: The Charities Regulatory Authority\n IV. Regime Change: Lessons from Other Jurisdictions\n V. Conclusion\n9. Independent Schools in Scotland: Should they be Charities?\n I. Introduction\n II. Scottish Independent Schools in Context\n III. Should Independent Schools be Abolished in Scotland?\n IV. Scottish Independent Schools as Charities\n V. Should Independent Schools be Excluded from Charitable Status in Scotland?\n VI. Should Independent Schools Enjoy the Full Range of Charity Tax Reliefs?\n VII. Conclusions – Relevance for England and Wales?\n10. Licking their Own Lollipops: What do Charities and the Public Think about the Regulation of Charitable Activities?\n I. Introduction\n II. What Do We Know about Regulation?\n III. What Do Charities Think?\n IV. What Do Members of the Public Think?\n V. Conclusion: Should this Matter?\n11. Commissioning of Services by Charities in the Third Decade of the Contract Culture: Lessons Learned (or Not Yet)\n I. Introduction\n II. Payment by Results\n III. The Challenges of PbR Contracts for Charities\n IV. Structural Alleviating Measures for Charities Entering into PbR Contracts\n V. Additional Government Support for Contracting Using PbR\n VI. Charities in the New Contracting Environment - Towards the Future\n VII. Conclusion\n12. Regulating the Digital (Currency) Revolution: Unravelling the Technological Challenge Faced by Charities\n I. Introduction\n II. Digital Currencies as an Emerging Technological Opportunity for Charities\n III. Regulation of (Emerging) Technology as a Research Lens\n IV. Unravelling the Legal Challenges Posed by Digital Currencies to Charities\n V. Concluding Remarks – A Digital Future for Charities?\n13. Social Housing – Charities and Vulnerable Groups\n I. Introduction\n II. Understanding Charities and Social Housing\n III. Contemporary Challenges Facing Charities in Meeting Need in Social Housing for Vulnerable Groups\n IV. Conclusions\n14. Charity Law and Policy: Looking Forward\n I. Researching the Regulatory State\n II. Nonprofit Controversy within the Regulatory State\n III. Problems of Size\n IV. Hope for the Future?\nIndex