Academic literature on the topic 'Pudsey (England). Borough Council'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pudsey (England). Borough Council"

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Howarth, David. "Negligence After Murphy: Time to Re-Think." Cambridge Law Journal 50, no. 1 (March 1991): 58–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008197300099499.

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After a decade of adventure, Anns v. Merton Borough Council has been killed off. The case that seemed to many to be the most important statement of the law of negligence in England since Donoghue v. Stevenson has been finally done to death by a specially augmented House of Lords in Murphy v. Brentwood District Council?For the House of Lords openly to overrule one of its own previous decisions is itself an event rare enough to deserve comment. But when the Law Lords, by 7–0, declare unsound a case that has been cited in 189 English cases in only 13 years (and until recently mostly with approval), we know that something extraordinary has happened.
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Tewdwr-Jones, Mark, Janice Morphet, and Philip Allmendinger. "The Contested Strategies of Local Governance: Community Strategies, Development Plans, and Local Government Modernisation." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 38, no. 3 (March 2006): 533–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a37308.

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The current round of local government modernisation in England, which commenced in 1997, has focused primarily on three main areas—new council constitutions, e-government, and performance. However, a fourth strand of initiatives relates to the power of well-being and the duty to prepare a community strategy, in partnership with a local strategic partnership. Academic commentators and planners, who have been focusing on the proposed UK planning reforms as contained within the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act (passed in 2004), have largely ignored the development of this strand. In this paper we explore these aspects of the local government modernisation agenda for planners and pull out some of the key issues for comparison in the ownership, role, and development of the new plans: community strategies and development plans. Opportunities and difficulties of ensuring that new development plans become the spatial expression of community strategies is assessed through an illustration of the relationship between the London Borough of Camden's community strategy and its unitary development plan. Following a review of the content of both documents, wider assessments are drawn out and we conclude by debating the implications of and challenges for a future reformed planning system at the local level.
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Brown, L. Neville. "La nouvelle justice naturelle : l'administrateur « équitable et raisonnable »." Les Cahiers de droit 21, no. 1 (April 12, 2005): 67–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/042368ar.

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This paper, based on a public lecture given in October, 1979, at the Faculty of Law of Laval University, gives an account of recent developments in English administrative law concerning the concepts of fairness and reasonableness. Tracing back the origins of the concept of fairness and its revival in Ridge v. Baldwin, the paper illustrates its current use by discussing several recent cases where Lord Denning's thinking appears to have had a strong influence. The contents of the administrator's duty to act fairly is described by the metaphor of a sliding scale allowing for a great diversity of requirements to suit the variety of statutory contexts. As to the concept of reasonableness, the paper brings out its close affinities with private law, and its progressive introduction as a standard by which courts rule on the legality of administrative decisions. This process has recently culminated in the Tameside and Laker cases, which are discussed at length. Both fairness and reasonableness may be shown to have rough equivalents in other European legal systems. The recent case of R. v. Barnsley Borough Council, ex p. Hook may point to another ground for cross-influences between English, French and German administrative law, especially in the context of EEC law : a concept of « proportionality » may be emerging in England — a distant outgrowth of the prohibition against « excessive fines » and « cruel and unusual punishment » in the Bill of Rights.
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Kopeć, Marcin. "Rewitalizacja przemysłowych miast angielskich na przykładzie Barnsley." Studies of the Industrial Geography Commission of the Polish Geographical Society 12 (June 4, 2009): 183–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.24917/20801653.12.17.

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Polish cities need to redevelop post-industrial areas located within their boundaries. Cities’ authorities, while preparing regeneration programs, can use best practices of Western European cities. One very good example is the case of the English town Barnsley. Barnsley in earlier days was famous for coal mining, but the last pit was closed in 1994. With the demise of the coal industry, people suffered from unemployment and the town from losing its main revenue sources (in 2000, the town was ranked 16th out of 354 most deprived district of England). Town was blighted by a very high incidence of post-industrial areas: disused colliery spoil tips, pit yards and the railway infrastructure which served the collieries. For many years Barnsley has carried out an extensive land reclamation program, together with investments put into new road links and job creation schemes for the former colliery workers. Between 1982 and 2003, over 23 million GBP was spent on the restoration of over 600 hectares of derelict land. Barnsley’s vision is to be a 21st Century Market Town. Those plans are prepared for the next 30 years, and the budget of 380 million GBP (including EU co-financing) constitutes the basis for the town transformation. In 2002, the Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council, together with local partners, started the Rethinking Barnsley weekend, a consultation project, which was the entry for preparing the urban centre regeneration program, called Remaking Barnsley. Planned and partly realised projects include construction of the new Barnsley Interchange – bus and coach station opened in May 2007, new cultural centre in the old Civic Hall, new commercial centre in Barnsley Markets, Digital Media Centre – opened in August 2007 – an incubator of new technologies, as well as new office and residential areas in the town centre. New business parks opened the new possibilities on the labour market. A well planned and perfectly realised process of the town development, started by wide citizens’ consultancy program, treated as a basis for establishing the town development vision, transformed then into an action plan and verified by already completed projects, is a good example to be copied by Polish towns.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pudsey (England). Borough Council"

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Snape, Stephanie A. "The implementation of social policy in England in the 1930s : a case study of Cheshire County Council and Birkenhead County Borough." Thesis, University of Bristol, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.319198.

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Books on the topic "Pudsey (England). Borough Council"

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Great Britain. Audit Commission for Local Authorities in England and Wales. Profile of Solihull Borough Council 1988/89. Bristol: Audit Commission for Local Authorities in England and Wales, 1988.

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Stephens, Harold R. Borough of Charnwood local plan: Inspectors' report. Loughborough, Leics: Charnwood Borough Council, 2000.

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Stephens, Harold R. Borough of Charnwood local plan: Inspectors' report. Loughborough, Leics: Charnwood Borough Council, 2000.

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Stephens, Harold R. Borough of Charnwood local plan: Inspectors' report. Loughborough, Leics: Charnwood Borough Council, 2000.

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Brown, Tim. Assessing housing requirements for specific needs groups: Boston Borough Council. Leicester: De Montfort University, 2000.

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O'Reilly, Laura Bernadette. The personnel implications of implementing the community charge within Brighton Borough Council. [Eastbourne?: L.B. O'Reilly], 1988.

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Lickiss, Rachel. The provision of information to council tenants: A study of Brighton Borough Housing Department. Brighton: Lewis Cohen Urban Studies Centre, 1988.

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Library, Stockport Heritage. A brief guide to sources for the history of buildings, properties, structures and sites within Stockport M.B.C.. (Stockport): Stockport Heritage Library, 1994.

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Kent, Peter. 'The voice for Crewe': A political history of Crewe Borough Council 1877-1974. Crewe, Cheshire: MMU Cheshire Research, 2013.

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Great Britain. Social Services Inspectorate. North East Inspection Group. Inspection of local authority social services emergency out of hours arrangements: Hartlepool Borough Council. Gateshead: North East Inspection Group, Social Services Inspectorate, Dept. of Health, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pudsey (England). Borough Council"

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Arden, Kate, Keith Cunliffe, and Penny A. Cook. "Cultural change and the evolution of community governance: a North‑West England perspective." In Local Authorities and the Social Determinants of Health, 149–72. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447356233.003.0009.

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This chapter investigates the response of a local authority in Greater Manchester, Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council, to the opportunities afforded by localism, implemented in the face of austerity. The impact of austerity measures imposed by central government amounted to an effective reduction in Wigan Council's budget of 40 per cent phased in over 10 years, and a loss of around a fifth of its workforce. Wigan experienced the fifth highest cut in spending out of all local authorities. The response, the creation of the 'Wigan Deal', is a major transformation programme which is still ongoing at the time of writing. The transformation started in 2012 and is both an approach to manage demand for services as well as a positive change in the understanding and relationship between citizens and public servants.
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Watt, Paul. "The research boroughs and their estates." In Estate Regeneration and its Discontents, 89–123. Policy Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447329183.003.0004.

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This chapter summarises the London research boroughs and estates. The research focusses on fourteen council-built housing estates in seven boroughs: Barnet, Hackney, Haringey, Lambeth, Newham, Southwark and Tower Hamlets. Six of these boroughs (except suburban Barnet) have been among the most deprived local authority areas in England for decades, and include high levels of poverty and large Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic populations, although they have also gentrified since the 1980s. The fourteen estates are analysed in terms of their local authority origins, landlords and housing tenure, and also the rationale, progress and effects of their respective regeneration schemes. Reference is made to entrepreneurial borough strategies where relevant. In addition to the seven main boroughs, less extensive research was undertaken at five council estates in four supplementary boroughs: Brent, Camden, Waltham Forest and Westminster. The chapter provides a socio-demographic summary of the estate resident interviewees divided into four housing tenures: social tenants, Right-to-Buy owner-occupiers, temporary non-secure tenants, and owner-occupiers who bought their homes on the open market. The interviewees broadly reflect the dominant multi-ethnic working-class population of London’s social housing estates, albeit weighted towards elderly and long-term residents.
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