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  1. Regulation (magazine): Regulation is a quarterly periodical about policy published by the Cato Institute. It was started as a bimonthly magazine in 1977 by the American Enterprise Institute and acquired by Cato in 1989. (Magazine) [100%] 2024-01-01 [Bimonthly magazines published in the United States] [American Enterprise Institute]...
  2. Regulation: A Regulation can be the formulation and issuance by authorized agencies of specific rules or regulations, under governing law, for the conduct and structure of a certain industry or activity. Courts have affirmed a general authority by government to regulate ... [100%] 2023-03-02 [Economics] [Regulation]...
  3. Regulation: Regulation is the management of complex systems according to a set of rules and trends. In systems theory, these types of rules exist in various fields of biology and society, but the term has slightly different meanings according to context. (Finance) [100%] 2023-10-21 [Economics of regulation]
  4. Intellectual Property Regulation Board: The Intellectual Property Regulation Board (IPReg) is a body regulating the patent attorney and trademark attorney professions in the United Kingdom (UK). It was set up by the Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys (CIPA) and the Institute of Trade Mark ... (British regulatory body) [92%] 2024-01-07 [United Kingdom patent law] [Self-regulatory organisations in the United Kingdom]...
  5. Board: BOARD bord (qeresh, "a slab or plank," "deck of a ship," "bench," "board"): This word is found in Exodus 26:16-21; 36:21; its plural occurs in Exodus 26:15,17-29; 35:11; 36:20-34; 39:33 ... [84%] 1915-01-01
  6. Board: Board, a plank or long narrow piece of timber. The word comes into various compounds to describe boards used for special purposes, or objects like boards (drawing-board, ironing-board, sounding-board, chess-board, cardboard, back-board, notice-board, scoring ... [84%] 2022-09-02
  7. Bords: Bords es una población y comuna francesa, situada en la región de Poitou-Charentes, departamento de Charente Marítimo, en el distrito de Saint-Jean-d'Angély y cantón de Saint-Savinien. [84%] 2024-01-21
  8. Immigration Boards: The peopling of the Great Plains in the United States was significantly fueled by the promotional activities of state and territorial immigration boards. citizens looked for a fresh start in the sparsely populated Plains. Overpopulation and a lack of land ... (Geography) [74%] 2004-01-01 [North America] [Great Plains]...
  9. Competent Boards: Competent Boards is an education management company that was established in 2018, and is headquartered in Toronto, Ontario. The company is best known for providing designation and certificate programs curated specifically for board members and senior business executives. [74%] 2023-10-06 [Companies established in 2018] [Education Management Corporation]...
  10. Gope boards: Gope Boards (or Kwoi) are wooden ritual objects made in the Papuan Gulf of New Guinea. They represent the spirits of ancestral heroes that can protect clans from evil spirits and death. (Papua New Guinean tribal art) [74%] 2022-06-03 [Religious objects] [Religion in Papua New Guinea]...
  11. Community Boards: Community Boards is a community based mediation program, established in 1976, in San Francisco , California , United States by Raymond Shonholtz. The program utilizes volunteers from the neighbourhoods of the city, who work with people involved in disagreements toward the end ... (Social) [74%] 2023-11-17 [Dispute resolution]
  12. Licensing boards: Licensing boards are state agencies created to regulate the issuance of licenses to certain professions. Most commonly licensure is required to practice certain professions pertaining to public health (e.g. [74%] 2023-03-05 [Legal Terms]
  13. Medical boards: Medical boards are the state entities that regulate the practice of medicine in each state, and grant or revoke medical licenses. While state medical boards traditionally are limited to protecting the quality of care for patients, increasingly state medical boards ... [74%] 2023-03-07 [Medicine] [Judicial Immunity]...
  14. Self-regulating heater: A positive temperature coefficient heating element (PTC heating element), or self-regulating heater, is an electrical resistance heater whose resistance increases significantly with temperature. The name self-regulating heater comes from the tendency of such heating elements to maintain a ... (Type of resistive heater) [72%] 2024-01-07 [Heating]
  15. Self-regulating heater: A positive temperature coefficient heating element (PTC heating element) or self-regulating heater is an electrical resistance heater whose resistance increases significantly with temperature. The name self-regulating heater comes from the tendency of such heating elements to maintain a ... (Physics) [72%] 2023-12-03 [Heating]
  16. Regulating Act 1773: The Regulating Act 1773 (formally, the East India Company Act 1772) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain intended to overhaul the management of the East India Company's rule in India (Bengal). The Act did not prove ... (Act of the Parliament of Great Britain) [72%] 2024-06-22 [Great Britain Acts of Parliament 1773] [Legislation in British India]...
  17. Prudential regulation: Prudential regulation is a type of financial regulation that requires financial firms to control risks and hold adequate capital as defined by capital requirements, liquidity requirements, by the imposition of concentration risk (or large exposures) limits, and by related reporting ... (Finance) [70%] 2023-12-04 [Financial regulation]
  18. Regulation school: The regulation school (French: l'école de la régulation) is a group of writers in political economy and economics whose origins can be traced to France in the early 1970s, where economic instability and stagflation were rampant in the French ... (Social) [70%] 2023-11-04 [Sociological theories]
  19. Liquidity regulation: Liquidity regulations are financial regulations designed to ensure that financial institutions (e.g. banks) have the necessary assets on hand in order to prevent liquidity disruptions due to changing market conditions. (Finance) [70%] 2023-12-07 [Financial regulation]
  20. Regulation 17: Regulation 17 (French: Règlement 17) was a regulation of the Government of Ontario, Canada, designed to limit instruction in French-language Catholic separate schools. The regulation was written by the Ministry of Education and was issued in July 1912 by ... (Social) [70%] 2023-11-23 [Linguistic discrimination] [Cultural assimilation]...

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