In our first issue, we included a comparative review that comparedhow the Prospectus Directive had been implemented in variousEuropean Economic Area (EEA) Member States. That Directive setsout the requirements for initial disclosure, through a prospectus,of the information an investor requires to make its initialinvestment decision, when transferable securities are offeredto the public or admitted to an EEA-regulated market. Some 18months later, we turn to the legislative companion piece—theTransparency Obligations Directive or Directive 2004/109/EC(known familiarly as the ‘TD’ or sometimes, butonly outside Germany, as ‘TOD’—in this articlethe abbreviation ‘TD’ will be used throughout).This is an important Directive that is designed to achieve anumber of objectives. First, it recognizes that markets depend on information. Itis not enough that issuers describe their business and financialposition to the market only when they ask for new money by issuingsecurities. . . . [Full Text of this Article]   1. Introduction2. Regulated informationRegulated information under French lawLanguage of the regulated informationEffective and complete distribution3. Periodic informationReports on financial informationOther information4. Ongoing informationInformation about major holdingsInformation for holders of securities   1. Introduction2. State of origin concept and domestic issuer concept3. Periodic information requirementsGeneralResponsibility and liability for periodic information4. Ongoing information requirements5. Summary   1. Introduction: the legal context2. Key points of implementation in ItalyThe Italian liability regime for market disclosure3. Concluding summary   1. Introduction2. Competent authority3. Liability4. Jurisdictional scope of liability5. Responsibility6. Major shareholdings   1. Introduction2. Periodic information requirementsAnnual financial statementsHalf-yearly financial statementsInterim management statements and quarterly financial statementsLiability3. Ongoing information requirementsImportant participations notificationVoting rights modification notificationNotification and publication procedureOwn sharesAdditional (general) information obligations of issuers of shares4. Competent authorityNotification of the CSSFAdditional information and sanctionsThird country exemption5. Language and media6. Timing7. Conclusion   1. Introduction2. Super-equivalent rules3. Periodical information4. LiabilityIssuerDirectors5. Rules on disclosure of major shareholdings6. Conclusion   1. Introduction2. Law 6/20073. RD 1362Periodic informationResponsibility and liabilityContent of financial reportsInformation on major holdings and own sharesNotification of the acquisition or disposal of major holdingsAcquisition or disposal of a major proportion of voting rightsProcedures for notificationOwn sharesGeneral provisionsAccess to regulated informationLanguagesOther information obligationsRemuneration schemes4. Summary   1. Introduction2. Periodic financial reporting requirementsSuper equivalent applicationOther points to notePeriodic financial reporting and non-UK issuers3. Major shareholding notification regimeSuper equivalent applicationContracts for differenceOther points to noteMajor shareholding notification and non-UK issuers4. Summary  相似文献   
985.
Economic Sector Stabilization     
Charles Tiplitz 《Economic Change and Restructuring》2002,35(2):141-159
Using a dynamic competitive disequilibrium model this paper determined that centrally directed sector resource stabilization or planning probably could not shorten the time for a developed economy to reach equilibrium. This is due to the disaggregation of data available centrally, an old concern. Therefore, the old issues of freedom and corruption under planning appear moot.  相似文献   
986.
987.
Joined-up government and privacy in the United Kingdom: managing tensions between data protection and social policy. Part II     
Christine Bellamy  Perri  Charles Raab 《Public administration》2005,83(2):393-415
The tension between the goals of integrated, seamless public services, requiring more extensive data sharing, and of privacy protection, now represents a major challenge for UK policy‐makers, regulators and service managers. In Part I of this article (see Public Administration volume 83, number 1, pp. 111–33), we showed that attempts to manage this tension are being made at two levels. First, a settlement is being attempted at the level of general data protection law and the rules that govern data‐sharing practices across the public sector. We refer to this as the horizontal dimension of the governance of data sharing and privacy. Secondly, settlements are also being attempted within particular fields of public policy and service delivery; this we refer to as the vertical dimension. In this second part, we enquire whether risks to privacy are greater in some policy sectors than others. We do this, first by showing how the Labour Government's policy agenda is producing stronger imperatives towards data sharing than was the case under previous administrations in three fields of public policy and services, and by examining the safeguards introduced in these fields. We then compare the settlements emerging from differing practices within each of these policy sectors, before briefly assessing which, if any, principles of data protection seem to be most at risk and in which policy contexts. Four strategies for the governance of data sharing and privacy are recapitulated – namely, seeking to make the two commitments consistent or even mutually reinforcing; mitigating the tensions with safeguards such as detailed guidelines; allowing privacy to take precedence over integration; and allowing data sharing to take precedence over privacy. We argue that the UK government has increasingly sought to pursue the second strategy and that the vertical dimension is, in practice, much more important in defining the settlement between data sharing and privacy than is the horizontal dimension. This strategy is, however, potentially unstable and may not be sustainable. The conclusion proposes a radical recasting of the way in which the idea of a ‘balance’ between privacy and data‐sharing imperatives is conceived.  相似文献   
988.
989.
The Lottery and Education: Robbing Peter to Pay Paul?     
Charles J. Spindler 《Public Budgeting & Finance》1995,15(3):54-62
Despite the promises of some states to use lottery revenues to fund education, they may be guilty of robbing Peter to pay Paul. This study examines the question of revenue fungibility in the case of state lotteries. Using time-series analysis, the research suggests that education is not a big winner in state lotteries. Two different patterns of fungibility emerge from the analysis that are suggestive of underlying budgetary politics.  相似文献   
990.
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981.
982.
A Massachusetts decision applying the US fair use principlesto unlicensed broadcasts of news photographs highlights thespecial protection given to news photographs, but not news videos,under UK copyright law.  相似文献   
983.
This study examined the effect of drivers' race and gender on officers' decision to search a driver/vehicle and invoke a legal sanction, controlling for legal and extralegal factors. Logistic regression analyses of 10,210 traffic stops on a university campus indicated that drivers' race and gender had a significant effect on officers' decision to search a driver/vehicle and invoke a legal sanction. Black male drivers were more likely than White drivers to be searched, but were less likely to receive a legal sanction. Unexpectedly, the results showed that Asian drivers were less likely to be searched, but more likely to receive legal sanctions than White drivers. Findings, however, indicated that legal and extralegal factors (i.e., types of traffic violation, time, officer type) were found to have significant effects on officers' decisions during traffic stops.  相似文献   
984.
Dr Axel Gehringer Hengeler Mueller Stefano Cuccia Head of Market Supervision, TLX, Milan David Byers McCann FitzGerald, Solicitors, Dublin Henri Wagner and Anne-Marie Thomas Allen & Overy, Luxembourg Petra Zijp and Matthieu van Straaten NautaDutilh NV, Amsterdam José Manuel Cuenca and Yolanda Azanza Clifford Chance Daniel Bushner and Jonathan Parry Ashurst, London The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.
   Editor's Note    France    Germany    Italy    Ireland    Luxembourg    The Netherlands    Spain    United Kingdom
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