927 resultados para Contracts, lettinf of


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Debido a los cambios que se han dado en los sistemas de contratación en Colombia, para la ejecución de las obras de infraestructura que necesita el país, las responsabilidades frente a los riesgos han sido transferidas del Estado a los contratistas, salvo en el caso del riesgo geológico en la construcción de túneles, situación totalmente nueva, por cuanto en el pasado próximo, era el Estado el que resultaba siendo garante de las situaciones adversas que se presentaban durante la ejecución de los proyectos, por tanto, este hecho debe ser manejado de una manera seria y responsable por parte del contratista, de lo contrario es muy posible que en el camino se encuentre ante escenarios desfavorables que pueden afectar significativamente las finanzas de los ejecutores de dichos proyectos -- Se observa que en el caso del primer paquete de licitaciones de las mega obras, llamadas cuarta generación de concesiones, que el tema de riesgos no fue abordado de la manera como se debe hacer; las organizaciones participantes en dichos procesos se limitaron, en su gran mayoría, a solicitar asesoría a las aseguradoras, resultando análisis reducidos y direccionados hacia la venta de pólizas de seguros, cuando en realidad, el grueso de los riesgos que se deben asumir en este tipo de proyectos, no son asegurables, situación que posiblemente ha dejado desprotegidos a muchos de los constructores que resultaron ser adjudicatarios del mencionado paquete de licitaciones -- Debido a lo antes descrito, el autor de este trabajo decidió abordar el tema de los riesgos de otra manera, siendo más profundo en el análisis, y en primera instancia olvidándose de los seguros y las empresas aseguradoras -- Inicialmente, se pretendió hacer la identificación, clasificación y valoración de los riesgos encontrados, sin embargo, debido a lo extenso y complejo del tema, se hizo necesario repensar el alcance del trabajo de grado para optar al título de Magister en Gerencia Financiera, hasta la identificación de los riesgos en las diferentes etapas que comprende un proyecto de Alianza Público Privada o de concesión vial -- Quedan las puertas abiertas para que estudiantes de posgrado continúen este trabajo en las etapas de valoración y control de los riesgos identificados, no solo del área financiera, sino de riesgos, administración, o cualquier otra disciplina, que aborde tan interesante tema para profundizar, esto con el ánimo de cambiar la mentalidad del constructor colombiano que ha venido acostumbrado a no mirar el futuro con sentido de proyección y prevención de las tantas situaciones adversas que alteran el normal desarrollo de los macro proyectos de ingeniería

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Contractual agreements have become an accepted part of participation processes for athletes in a variety of sport contexts. Closer readings of these contracts,however, pose several questions regarding organizational intentions and motivations,the conceptualization of athletes as “workers,” and representation parity. In this article, we draw on four types of athlete contractual documents from both select international “amateur” and “professional” sport settings. Our key considerations include athletes’ ownership over their image and identities; medical and health disclosures; lifestyle, behavioral and body choices, and restrictions beyond sport; adherence to organizational philosophy and commitments; and social media and publicity constraints. Our exegesis here encourages sport researchers to deliberate whose “wellbeing” matters most when signing that seductive dotted line.

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Includes bibliographical references and index.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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The greater volume of businesses sold in Australia each year are small to medium enterprises. The administration of business contracts presents far different challenges than, for example, contracts for the sale of goods alone or contracts for the sale of land. The subject matter comprises both real and personal, and tangible and intangible property. Other considerations that do not affect those other commonplace contracts include dealing with employees who are both remaining and departing, taking account of restraints of trade, and the phenomena of the passing of property being different in respect of different forms of property being transferred in the same contract. In keeping with the format of the previous edition, the book is written with the busy practitioner in mind. It deals with the formation of business contracts, all aspects of disclosure both contractual and statutory, the role of agents, and detailed consideration of the different types of subject matter of small business contracts including, the lease of the premises, intellectual property, goodwill, licences, book debts and plant and equipment. It has up to date treatment of income tax implications of the sale and the impact of the latest Commonwealth legislation on dealing with employees of a business on sale. Consistent with the last edition, the book has chapters on time of the essence and completion, personal securities, restraint of trade clauses, special conditions and remedies for breach by both parties and misleading or deceptive conduct by the seller. In relation to personal securities, whilst the current State and Territory based law on Bills of Sale and other Chattel Securities has been the subject of commentary, the proposed national reform agenda has also been commented upon although that legislation is not due until May 2010 at the earliest

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The significance of the proposed name of a building to buyers of units off the plan has received recent attention in Queensland and the ACT with differing results. In Gough v South Sky Investments Pty Ltd the Queensland Court of Appeal concluded that the name of the building was not an essential term of the contract and rejected a claim by a number of buyers to terminate their contracts because of the change of name from Oracle to Peppers. In contrast, Rares J in the Federal Court decision of Madison Constructions Pty Ltd v Empire Building Group (ACT) Pty Ltd considered that the name of the building in a proposed development could potentially form the basis of misleading conduct about the association of the seller with a particular development corporation.

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Construction contracts often provide that decisions under the contract will be made by a certifier. This paper reviews the liability issues when a certifier makes a mistake. We do that in light of recent pronouncements by the High Court of Australia and the New South Wales Court of Appeal on negligence. We look at this question in the context of traditional construction contract arrangements and also consider the implications for Public Private Partnerships and the typical contract arrangements entered into to facilitate these transactions.

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The Supreme Court of Canada's ruling in Bhasin v Hrynew represents a significant step forward in harmonising the multiple strands of debate surrounding the existence of a good faith provision in common law contracting. Although a general principle of good faith (derived from Roman Law) is recognized by most civil law systems and a growing number of common law countries have embraced statutory provisions towards this end, Bhasin v Hrynew is argued to be a critical advance in catalysing uniform acceptance of good faith as a fundamental principle essential to support an increasingly integrated global commercial environment.

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As the economic burden of HIV/AIDS increases in sub-Saharan Africa, the allocation of the burden among levels and sectors of societies is changing. The private sector has greater scope than government, households, or NGOs to avoid the economic burden of AIDS, and a systematic shifting of the burden away from the private sector is underway. Common practices that shift the AIDS burden from businesses to households and government include pre-employment screening, reduced employee benefits, restructured employment contracts, outsourcing of less skilled jobs, selective retrenchments, and changes in production technologies. In South Africa, more than two thirds of large employers have reduced health care benefits or required larger contributions by employees. Most firms have replaced defined benefit retirement funds, which expose the firm to large annual costs but provide long-term support for families, with defined contribution funds, which eliminate firm risk but provide little to families of younger workers who die of AIDS. Contracting out of previously permanent jobs also shields firms from costs while leaving households and government to care for affected workers and their families. Many of these changes are responses to globalization and would have occurred in the absence of AIDS, but they are devastating for employees with HIV/AIDS. This paper argues that the shifting of the economic burden of AIDS is a predictable response by business to which a thoughtful public policy response is needed. Countries should make explicit decisions about each sector’s responsibilities if a socially desirable allocation is to be achieved.