Public-Private Nature of Charity Law
Samenvatting
Is charity law a 'private law' or a 'public law' subject? This book maps charity law's relationship to the public law-private law divide, arguing that charity law is best understood as a hybrid (public-private) legal tradition that is constantly seeking to maintain an equilibrium between the protection of the autonomy of property-owning individuals to direct and control their wealth, and the furtherance of competing public visions of the good.
Of interest to scholars and charity lawyers alike, The 'Public-Private Nature of Charity Law' applies its unique lens both to traditional topics such as the public benefit rule and charity law's rules of standing, and to more contemporary issues such as the co-optation of charitable resources by threatened welfare states and the emergence of social enterprise.
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
2. Charity Regulators and the Institutional Public Law–Private Law Divide
3. Public Benefit and the Substantive Public Law–Private Law Divide
4. Charity Law Standing Rules and the Procedural Public Law–Private Law Divide
5. Alternative Equilibriums: Tax-based Charity Regulation and the Public Law–Private Law Divide
6. Challenges to the Hybrid Equilibrium: The Co-optation of Charitable Resources by Threatened Welfare States
7. New Equilibriums: Social Enterprise as a Post-charitable Legal Form
8. Conclusion
Anderen die dit boek kochten, kochten ook
Net verschenen
Rubrieken
- aanbestedingsrecht
- aansprakelijkheids- en verzekeringsrecht
- accountancy
- algemeen juridisch
- arbeidsrecht
- bank- en effectenrecht
- bestuursrecht
- bouwrecht
- burgerlijk recht en procesrecht
- europees-internationaal recht
- fiscaal recht
- gezondheidsrecht
- insolventierecht
- intellectuele eigendom en ict-recht
- management
- mens en maatschappij
- milieu- en omgevingsrecht
- notarieel recht
- ondernemingsrecht
- pensioenrecht
- personen- en familierecht
- sociale zekerheidsrecht
- staatsrecht
- strafrecht en criminologie
- vastgoed- en huurrecht
- vreemdelingenrecht