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Some Related Sentences

regulatory and body
As a body of law, administrative law deals with the decision-making of administrative units of government ( for example, tribunals, boards or commissions ) that are part of a national regulatory scheme in such areas as police law, international trade, manufacturing, the environment, taxation, broadcasting, immigration and transport.
However, the members of an industry have a very strong interest in the actions of a regulatory body, while the rest of the citizenry are only lightly affected.
To maintain the momentum of the perceived commercial interest in this new investment opportunity, in 1983, the Government itself granted eleven interim franchises for new broadband systems each covering a community of up to around 100, 000 homes, but the competitive franchising process was otherwise left to the new regulatory body, the Cable Authority, which took on its powers from January 1, 1985.
At that time, numerous influences-including a growing awareness of the unity and fragility of the biosphere following mankind's first steps into outer space ( see, for example, the Blue Marble ), increased public concern over the impact of industrial activity on natural resources and human health ( see, for example, the 1969 Cuyahoga River fire, the increasing strength of the regulatory state, and more broadly the advent and success of environmentalism as a political movement-coalesced to produce a huge new body of law in a relatively short period of time.
The Gibraltar Regulatory Authority is the Gambling Commissioner under the Gambling Act 2005, and therefore the regulatory body.
* Interstate Commerce Commission, a now defunct US Government regulatory body
This act also created the Mauritius Telecommunications Authority ( MTA ) as a regulatory body for the telecommunications sector.
FATF is a policy-making body, which brings together legal, financial and law enforcement experts to achieve national legislation and regulatory AML and CFT reforms.
Regulated provinces and territories admit internationally educated midwives to their regulatory body if they can demonstrate competency through a Prior Learning and Experience Assessment ( PLEA ) process.
a state regulatory body called Krajowa Rada Radiofonii i Telewizji ( The National Radio and Television Committee ), which is similar to CRTC in Canada.
Another example of a regulatory body that governs a profession is the Hong Kong Professional Teachers Union, which governs the conduct, rights, obligations and duties of salaried teachers working in educational institutions in Hong Kong.
In the United States, it is important to note that Women's Rowing is an NCAA sport, while Men's Rowing chooses to remain governed by its own regulatory body, the Intercollegiate Rowing Association ( IRA ).
During the period of 1993-2000 there is rise in competition with legislation of the regulatory body being changed several times.
One of the major causes that lead competitions thrive in areas that did not have a history of monopoly was the light handed approach taken towards the interconnection issue by the regulatory body initially.
This process eventually lead to the abolition of the light handed regulatory approach towards interconnection and put more power in the hands of the regulatory body.
* Written by a government or regulatory body
The Comisión Nacional de la Energía ( National Energy Commission ) is the regulatory body for energy systems, created by Law 34 / 1998, of 7 October of the Hydrocarbons Sector, and developed by Royal Decree 1339 / 1999, of 31 July, which approved its regulations.
The average result of the TRE survey in Thailand ( 2. 8 out of 5 ) reveals mixed performance of the National Telecommunications Commission ( NTC ), the Thai telecom regulatory body.
Their theory is that an international regulatory body is needed to protect environmental integrity and the global commons on the two-thirds of the world ’ s surface that is outside national jurisdictions.
A sport governing body is a sports organization that has a regulatory or sanctioning function.
A common carrier offers its services to the general public under license or authority provided by a regulatory body.
The regulatory body has usually been granted “ ministerial authority ” by the legislation which created it.
Issuers usually retain investment banks to assist them in administering the IPO, obtaining SEC ( or other regulatory body ) approval of the offering filing, and selling the new issue.

regulatory and may
In economics, regulatory arbitrage ( sometimes, tax arbitrage ) may be used to refer to situations when a company can choose a nominal place of business with a regulatory, legal or tax regime with lower costs.
In this regulatory scheme, every current polluting facility is given or may purchase on an open market an emissions allowance for each unit of a designated pollutant it emits.
At present, the NAATs have regulatory approval only for testing urogenital specimens, although rapidly evolving research indicates that they may give reliable results on rectal specimens.
Certain types of rules or customs may become law and regulatory legislation may be introduced to formalize or enforce the convention ( for example, laws that define on which side of the road vehicles must be driven ).
Information asymmetries and incomplete markets may result in economic inefficiency but also a possibility of improving efficiency through market, legal, and regulatory remedies, as discussed above.
The GAO has authority to audit check-processing, currency storage and shipments, and some regulatory and bank examination functions, however there are restrictions to what the GAO may audit.
Individual states may require the FDD to contain their own specific requirements, but the requirements in state disclosure documents must be in compliance with the federal rule that governs federal regulatory policy.
Hedge funds are privately-owned pools of investment capital with regulatory limits on the number and type of investor that each fund may have.
In response to these issues, many countries have enacted detailed statutory and regulatory regimes governing every aspect of the insurance business, including minimum standards for policies and the ways in which they may be advertised and sold.
In addition to being protein-coding, portions of coding regions may serve as regulatory sequences in the pre-mRNA as exonic splicing enhancers or exonic splicing silencers.
* Article 25 ( 5 ) states that the Article 7 ban on mining may not be repealed unless a future treaty establishes a binding regulatory framework for such activity.
Protease may have one or more regulatory domains -
An alternative form of regulatory subunit called the 11S particle can associate with the core in essentially the same manner as the 19S particle ; the 11S may play a role in degradation of foreign peptides such as those produced after infection by a virus.
The number of losers — which may add up to the size and severity of poverty — can be unexpectedly large if the method and process of privatization and how it is implemented are seriously flawed ( e. g. lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections, absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector, improper design and inadequate control of the privatization process leading to asset stripping.
* Distal promoter-the distal sequence upstream of the gene that may contain additional regulatory elements, often with a weaker influence than the proximal promoter
Some evolutionary biologists, for example Allan Wilson, have proposed that evolution in promoter or regulatory regions may be more important than changes in coding sequences over such time frames.
Enzymes composed of subunits with diverse functions are sometimes called holoenzymes, in which some parts may be known as regulatory subunits and the functional core is known as the catalytic subunit.
An mRNA may contain regulatory elements itself, such as riboswitches, in the 5 ' untranslated region or 3 ' untranslated region ; these cis-regulatory elements regulate the activity of that mRNA.
Furthermore, RCRA allows states to develop regulatory programs that are at least as stringent as RCRA and, after review by EPA, the states may take over responsibility for the implementation of the requirements under RCRA.
Universal wastes are subject to somewhat less stringent regulatory requirements and small quantity generators of universal wastes may be classified as " conditionally exempt small quantity generators " ( CESQGs ) which releases them from some of the regulatory requirements for the handling and storage hazardous wastes.
In the United States, wildlife managers are frequently part of hunting regulatory and licensing bodies, where they help to set rules on the number, manner and conditions in which game may be hunted.

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