Betekenis van:
law of closure

law of closure
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there is an innate tendency to perceive incomplete objects as complete and to close or fill gaps and to perceive asymmetric stimuli as symmetric

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. Other private companies, in the same circumstances, have opted for a voluntary liquidation scenario with the financing of a redundancy programme for the workers affected by the closure of activities’. According to the assessment requested by the Belgian authorities from a law firm specialising in labour law (Claeys & Engels), there are several recent examples of private companies which have adopted such conduct.
    2. Without the Land aid measures, the capital ratios would have fallen below the thresholds prescribed by the Banking Law, with the result that BAFin (known at the time as BAKred) would have had to take the necessary measures under Sections 45 to 46a of the Banking Law, including, for example, temporary closure.
    3. ‘operator’ means the natural or legal person responsible for the management of extractive waste, in accordance with the national law of the Member State in which waste management takes place, including in respect of temporary storage of extractive waste as well as the operational and the after-closure phases;
    4. They point out that the general meeting of Alitalia's shareholders which has to approve the accounts for 2004 is planned for 27 and 28 June 2005, that is to say on the deadline of 180 days required by law following the closure of the financial year.
    5. Thus, Charbonnages de France stated in the notes to its accounts of 31 December 2000 that all the rights and obligations of an EPIC must, in the event of closure, be transferred either to another legal entity governed by public law or to the French Government itself, and that the terms and conditions of such a transfer must be specified in the law adopted with a view to closing down the EPIC in question.
    6. They point out that the general meeting of Alitalia's shareholders which has to approve the accounts for 2004 is planned for 27 and 28 June 2005, that is to say on the deadline of 180 days required by law following the closure of the financial year. They also point out that the meeting of the board of directors that has to approve the draft balance sheet is set for 20 May 2005 [8].
    7. The Italian authorities have also sent the Commission a note stressing the need for a swift and positive decision by the Commission. They point out that the general meeting of Alitalia's shareholders which has to approve the accounts for 2004 is planned for 27 and 28 June 2005, that is to say on the deadline of 180 days required by law following the closure of the financial year.
    8. The Italian authorities have also sent the Commission a note stressing the need for a swift and positive decision by the Commission. They point out that the general meeting of Alitalia's shareholders which has to approve the accounts for 2004 is planned for 27 and 28 June 2005, that is to say on the deadline of 180 days required by law following the closure of the financial year. They also point out that the meeting of the board of directors that has to approve the draft balance sheet is set for 20 May 2005 [8]. In the absence of a Commission authorisation of the recapitalisation, or at least an indication in this regard, Alitalia does not rule out the possibility that, in view of the accumulated losses, the balance sheet may have to be drawn up with a view to the possible liquidation rather than continuity of the company.