corporate trust

  • 11Corporate personhood — refers to the question about which subset of rights that are afforded under the law to natural persons should also be afforded to corporations as legal persons. In Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819), corporations were recognized as having the… …

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  • 12Corporate Colonization — reflects that as organizations and corporations become the more centralized source of power within our societies, the more that an individual will derive their identity and values from the organization (Deetz 1992). This is opposed to the other… …

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  • 13Corporate sustainability — is a business approach that creates long term consumer and employee value by not only creating a green strategy aimed towards the natural environment, but taking into consideration every dimension of how a business operates in the social,… …

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  • 14Corporate video — production refers to audio visual corporate communications material (such as DVD, High definition video, streaming video[1] or other media) commissioned primarily for a use by a company, corporation or organisation. A corporate video is often… …

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  • 15Corporate security — identifies and effectively mitigates or manages, at an early stage, any developments that may threaten the resilience and continued survival of a corporation. It is a corporate function that oversees and manages the close coordination of all… …

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  • 16Trust — may refer to:* Trust (social sciences), a relationship of reliance. ** Trust Fall, a trust building game.In law: * Trust law, where money or property is owned and managed on behalf of another * Escrow, where a thing is held in trust until… …

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  • 17Corporate design — of the City council of Kehrsatz A corporate design is the official graphical design of the logo and name of a company or institution used on letterheads, envelopes, forms, folders, brochures, etc. The house style is created in such a way that all …

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  • 18trust fund doctrine — n: a doctrine holding that shareholders to whom assets of an insolvent corporation have been transferred are liable to creditors upon dissolution of the corporation; broadly: a doctrine holding that corporate assets are held as a trust fund for… …

    Law dictionary

  • 19Corporate services — are activities that combine or consolidate certain enterprise wide needed support services, provided based on specialized knowledge, best practices, and technology to serve internal (and sometimes external) customers and business partners. In the …

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  • 20Corporate transparency — is set of information, privacy, and business policies to improve corporate decisionmaking and operations openness to employees, stakeholders, shareholders and the general public. Standard Poor s has included a definition of corporate transparency …

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