45 research outputs found

    Charity registration and reporting:a cross-Jurisdictional and theoretical analysis of regulatory impact

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    Increasingly governments worldwide regulate charities, seeking to restrict the number of organizations claiming taxation exemptions, reduce abuse of state support and fraud. Under public interest theory governments may increase philanthropy through public trust and confidence in charities. Under public choice theory regulators will maximize political returns, ‘manage’ charity-government relationships, and avoid regulatory capture. Phillips and Smith (2014) suggest that charities’ regulatory regimes should coalesce, despite jurisdictional diversity. We analyse charity regulatory regimes against underlining theories of regulation, and assess regulatory costs and benefits. Thus regulators can reduce regulatory inefficiency, and balance accountability and transparency demands with charities’ abilities to deliver

    Analysis of the Role of the nnrR gene Product in the Response of Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1 to Exogenous Nitric Oxide

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    Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1, which is incapable of denitrification, has been found to carry nnrR, the nor operon, and nnrS, which are utilized for denitrification in R. sphaeroides 2.4.3. The gene encoding nitrite reductase was not found in 2.4.1. Expression of β-galactosidase activity from a norB-lacZ fusion was activated when cells of 2.4.1 were incubated with NO-producing bacteria. This result indicates that the products of nnrR and the genes flanking it are utilized when 2.4.1 is growing in an environment where denitrification occurs

    Analysis of the role of the nnrR gene product in the response of Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1 to exogenous nitric oxide.

    No full text
    Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1, which is incapable of denitrification, has been found to carry nnrR, the nor operon, and nnrS, which are utilized for denitrification in R. sphaeroides 2.4.3. The gene encoding nitrite reductase was not found in 2.4.1. Expression of beta-galactosidase activity from a norB-lacZ fusion was activated when cells of 2.4.1 were incubated with NO-producing bacteria. This result indicates that the products of nnrR and the genes flanking it are utilized when 2.4.1 is growing in an environment where denitrification occurs

    Divergent elbow dislocation with radial shaft fracture, distal ulnar deformation, and distal radioulnar joint instability: an unclassifiable Monteggia variant

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    Originally described by Monteggia and later classified by Bado, elbow dislocations with concurrent radial and ulnar shaft fractures with distal radioulnar joint (DRUJ) disruption are considered operative cases with high-energy injurious etiologies. Here, we present an unclassifiable Monteggia variant fracture suffered through a high axial load mechanism in a 47-year-old female. The fracture pattern initially exhibited included a divergent elbow dislocation, a radial shaft fracture, plastic deformation of the distal ulna, and DRUJ instability. Here we describe the pattern in detail, along with definitive treatment and clinical outcome at 1 year follow-up
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