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Licensing and Regulations

Webpages concerning "Licensing and Regulations"

Child Care,Health,Care Unit,KDHE Search,Kansas Department,Registration Program,Child Care Licensing,CCLRP Regulations
http://www.kdhe.state.ks.us/bcclr/index.html
Keywords:
Child Care, Health, Care Unit, KDHE Search, Kansas Department, Registration Program, Child Care Licensing, CCLRP Regulations

http://www.kdhe.state.ks.us/bcclr/index.html

National Health and Safety Performance Standards
http://nrc.uchsc.edu/
Keywords:
child care, day care, licensing, standards, caring, for, our, children, stepping stones, parents, consultants, regulators, providers, child care provider, state licensing regulations, regulations, regulatory agencies, medication administration, child care resources, health consultant, national resource center, safety, health, start, begin, open, abuse, care, day

http://nrc.uchsc.edu/

Development and implementation of legislation, policy, and program standards for licensed child day care facilities and adult residential care facilities
http://www.healthservices.gov.bc.ca/ccf/index.html
Keywords:
Community, Care, Facilities, Licensing, Child, Care, Adult, Regulations, ECE, Early Childhood Education, CCFB, residential, health, safety, Act

http://www.healthservices.gov.bc.ca/ccf/index.html

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Wikipedia-Article "Licensing"

It has been suggested that Licensing (strategic alliance) be merged into this article or section. (Discuss)
Property law
Part of the common law series
Acquisition of property
Gift  · Adverse possession  · Deed
Lost, mislaid, and abandoned property
Bailment  · Licence
Estates in land
Allodial title  · Fee simple
Life estate  · Fee tail  · Future interest
Concurrent estate  · Leasehold estate
Conveyancing of interests in land
Bona fide purchaser  · Torrens title
Estoppel by deed  · Quitclaim deed
Mortgage  · Equitable conversion
Action to quiet title
Limiting control over future use
Restraint on alienation
Rule against perpetuities
Rule in Shelley's Case
Doctrine of worthier title
Nonpossessory interest in land
Easement  · Profit
Covenant running with the land
Equitable servitude
Related topics
Fixtures  · Waste  · Partition
Riparian water rights
Lateral and subjacent support
Assignment  · Nemo dat
Other areas of the common law
Contract law  · Tort law
Wills and trusts
Criminal Law  · Evidence
Licence is also a state of liberty, and is sometimes used as a synonym for licentiousness.

A license (American English) or licence (Commonwealth English) is a document or agreement giving permission to do something.

In law, the document is the evidence of a license to be distinguished from the underlying license which is the actual permission to an act in a way that would be otherwise unlawful. Originally in reference to property, a license was the right of an individual to enter upon the property of another to do an act that would have otherwise been considered illegal as a trespass, such as walking in the woods, hunting game or swimming in the lake. To be distinguished from a license coupled with an interest which is an irrevocable license that granted some interest in land or in a chattel. Such a license could be enforced with an injunction. Licenses can be gratuitous, revokable at will (sometimes called a bare license) or a type of bailment.

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Occupational

Licensing (or Registration) is required of a number of occupations and professions where maintenance of standards is required to protect public safety, for example physicians, psychologists, electricians are licensed in many countries.

Intellectual property

The holder of intellectual property rights such as a copyright, trademark, or patent may (and often does) require that a license be accepted as a condition of being allowed to use, reproduce, or create an instance of the licensed work.

Computer users may think of licenses as in reference to end user licence agreements (EULA), which are claimed by vendors to encumber the user with extra restrictions besides the copyright, as a condition of granting permission under copyright law to use the work. The person who purchases a book normally owns the atoms and the right to resell or lend, but not the copyright to the text. In the United States this right to resell is part of the first-sale doctrine.

Software licenses are often highly restrictive, and most software users do not read them in full. So-called "shrink-wrap" licenses and "click-through" licenses are common. Most limit the number of computers the software can be installed on, the number of users that can use the software, and apply other limitations that are not inherent in the technology. As a result, huge fortunes have been made by selling goods that have a minimal cost of reproduction on a per-item basis.

In the U.S., the first-sale doctrine, Softman v. Adobe [1] and Novell, Inc. v. CPU Distrib., Inc. rule that software sales are purchases, not licenses, and resale, including unbundling, is lawful regardless of a contractual prohibition.

So-called free software licenses and open source licenses are a reaction to what many see as the unfair restrictions of proprietary software licenses.

Character and artwork licensing usually is negotiated between the owner and a licensor and results in a licensing fee payable to the artist or creator based upon the licensor's limitations on use of the licensed artwork. Larger companies with properties that have a proven track record of success can guarantee up-front payments (the "guarantee", in marketing terms) of thousands or millions of dollars from licensors (for example: Looney Tunes by Warner Bros., Harry Potter, Mickey Mouse from Disney, etc.) before products are even manufactured or sold to the public.

Academia

A book published in the U.S. and its licensed Chinese reprint (for sale in Mainland China only)
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A book published in the U.S. and its licensed Chinese reprint (for sale in Mainland China only)

A license is an academic degree in many European universities which is sort of equivalent to the master's degree. Originally, in order to teach at a university, one needed this degree which, according to its title, gave you a license to teach. The name survived despite the fact that nowadays one really needs a doctorate in order to teach at a university. A person who holds a license is called a licentiate. Currently, licenciate degree is a sort of middle-level degree between a master's degree and a doctorate.

See also

External links

This article is based on the article "Licensing" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia-Article "Regulations"

Portal Law Portal

A regulation is a legal restriction promulgated by government administrative agencies through rulemaking supported by a threat of sanction or a fine. This administrative law or regulatory law is in contrast to statutory or case law.

The economics of imposing or removing regulations relating to markets is analysed in regulatory economics.

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Regulation as a legal term

A regulation (as a legal term) is a rule created by an Administration or administrative agency or body that interprets the statute(s) setting out the agency's purpose and powers, or the circumstances of applying the statute.

A regulation is a form of secondary legislation which is used to implement a primary piece of legislation appropriately, or to take account of particular circumstances or factors emerging during the gradual implementation of, or during the period of, a primary piece of legislation.

Other forms of secondary legislation are statutory instruments, statutory orders, by-laws and rules. Some of these (but not all of them) need to be referred back before being implemented, to the primary legislative process.

Type of Regulation

Regulation can occur for various reasons and therefore can be classifed in several broad categories:

  • Market Failures - regulation due to inefficiency. Intervention due to a Classical Economics argument to market failure.
  • Collective Desires - regulation about collective desires or considered judgements on the part of a significant segments of society
  • Diverse Experiences - regulation with a view of providing opportunities for the formation of diverse preferences and beliefs
  • Social Subordination - regulation aimed to reduce social subordination of various social groups
  • Endogenous preferences - regulation's purpose is to affect the development of certain preferences on an aggregate level
  • Irreversibility - regulation that deals with the problem of irreversibility – the problem in which a certain type of conduct from current generations results in outcomes from which future generations may not recover from at all.
  • Interest-group transfers - regulation that that results from efforts by self-interest groups to redistribute wealth in their favor

International Experience

United Kingdom

An example in Britain is that there is primary, Central Government legislation covering the operations of Local Authorities. These functions include Education, Social Services, Leisure provision, etc..

In that primary legislation there are provisions to allow Local Authorities to legislate for themselves, within reason and under proper process, on a range of matters in their areas of responsibility. This allows the law to be effectively applied with appropriate flexibility and taking account of local factors. These are often best known by the Local Authority concerned.

Regulations also assist the primary legislative process, the national parliament, to avoid the potential bottleneck of the detailed implementatin of all the laws it produces in all the varying cirumstances throughout the land or throughout the process of their implementation.

France

In French law, the difference between statute law (adopted by the legislative branch) and regulation is of paramount importance when it comes to adoption, amendment or judicial review. The French constitution reserves a number of topics for statute law; in normal times, the executive branch may take decisions on such matters only if it has been specifically authorized by a statute to do so as secondary legislation through decrees, or if it has been specifically and rarely authorized by the legislative branch to do so as primary legislation through ordinances. On all other matters, the executive branch is solely responsible for issuing primary legislation through decrees. Secondary or tertiary legislation may come in the form of arrêtés.

All legislation and regulation issued by the executive, including ordinances not ratified by the legislative branch, is subject to judicial review by the administrative courts (see Conseil d'État).

European Union

EU regulation has a general scope, and is obligatory in all its elements and directly applicable in all Member States of the European Union. Any local laws contrary to the regulation are overruled, as EU Law has supremacy over the laws of the Member States. New legislation enacted by Member states must be consistent with the requirements of EU regulations. For these reasons regulations constitute the most powerful or influential of the EU legislative acts.

Other forms of legislative acts of the European Union (EU) are directives, decisions, recommendations and opinions.

Studies and analysis

Primer on Regulation (Mercatus, 2005) by Susan E. Dudley

See also

External links

This article is based on the article "Regulations" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.