Nineteenth century England, often called the age of reform, was a period of enormous political, social, and economic change. In the first two decades came an increase in the rate of transformation of the economy, the polity and society and a greater stir and movement in all spheres of public activity caused by more “rational and purposeful” control based upon measuring, counting and observing. Political, economic and governmental institutions developed modern structures and approaches. Charitable regulation reflected these trends. As part of a broader movement of inquiry, supervision and statutory reform, and in an effort to remedy the social evils of the time, the administration and abuse of charitable trusts became a part of a larger agen...
TEPSIS PAPERThe charities that developed in the major cities of the industrialized world throughout ...
TEPSIS PAPERThe charities that developed in the major cities of the industrialized world throughout ...
Campaigns for moral reform were a recurrent and distinctive feature of public life in later Georgian...
Fraudulent behavior by charitable fiduciaries brings universal condemnation. However, disapprobation...
Why is it so difficult to carry out effective institutional change? Why did the principle of charita...
This Thesis examines the emergence of party patronage trusts in the nineteenth-century Church of Eng...
George Müller and the Seventh Earl of Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, were men of different nati...
Recent decades have seen proliferating debate about charity and welfare provision. Passing beyond a ...
As this article is less about charity per se than it is about the relationships between place and in...
In September 1833 the medical officers of the Aldersgate-Street Dispensary, the oldest charitable in...
This study deals with the impact of financialization on the development of charity during the ninete...
By the 1890s Victorians assumed that London's hospitals were facing an endemic financial crisis whic...
For the first time since 1601, a number of leading common law nations have almost simultaneously cho...
The first express judicial reliance on the public benefit requirement for charitable trusts to concl...
In this volume, charity commissioners and leading charity policy reformers from across the world ref...
TEPSIS PAPERThe charities that developed in the major cities of the industrialized world throughout ...
TEPSIS PAPERThe charities that developed in the major cities of the industrialized world throughout ...
Campaigns for moral reform were a recurrent and distinctive feature of public life in later Georgian...
Fraudulent behavior by charitable fiduciaries brings universal condemnation. However, disapprobation...
Why is it so difficult to carry out effective institutional change? Why did the principle of charita...
This Thesis examines the emergence of party patronage trusts in the nineteenth-century Church of Eng...
George Müller and the Seventh Earl of Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, were men of different nati...
Recent decades have seen proliferating debate about charity and welfare provision. Passing beyond a ...
As this article is less about charity per se than it is about the relationships between place and in...
In September 1833 the medical officers of the Aldersgate-Street Dispensary, the oldest charitable in...
This study deals with the impact of financialization on the development of charity during the ninete...
By the 1890s Victorians assumed that London's hospitals were facing an endemic financial crisis whic...
For the first time since 1601, a number of leading common law nations have almost simultaneously cho...
The first express judicial reliance on the public benefit requirement for charitable trusts to concl...
In this volume, charity commissioners and leading charity policy reformers from across the world ref...
TEPSIS PAPERThe charities that developed in the major cities of the industrialized world throughout ...
TEPSIS PAPERThe charities that developed in the major cities of the industrialized world throughout ...
Campaigns for moral reform were a recurrent and distinctive feature of public life in later Georgian...