Local GovernmentMacmillan, 1883 - 160 pages |
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Page 12
... population increases , and as science enlarges our knowledge of sanitary matters and conditions and the laws of hygiene , the problems to be attacked by local government become more complex , and require more trained intelligence to ...
... population increases , and as science enlarges our knowledge of sanitary matters and conditions and the laws of hygiene , the problems to be attacked by local government become more complex , and require more trained intelligence to ...
Page 16
... population . When the number of inhabitants is less than 500 the conseil consists of ten councillors , and when the number of inhabitants exceeds 60,000 the number of councillors is thirty - six . It is not likely that ten competent men ...
... population . When the number of inhabitants is less than 500 the conseil consists of ten councillors , and when the number of inhabitants exceeds 60,000 the number of councillors is thirty - six . It is not likely that ten competent men ...
Page 19
... population of 41,000 persons , has one court of quarter sessions , and is divided into 9 hundreds , 7 petty sessional divisions , and 8 lieutenancy subdivisions . The police divisions , with two exceptions , coincide with the petty ...
... population of 41,000 persons , has one court of quarter sessions , and is divided into 9 hundreds , 7 petty sessional divisions , and 8 lieutenancy subdivisions . The police divisions , with two exceptions , coincide with the petty ...
Page 24
... population and wealth have advanced by leaps and bounds . To provide for the growing requirements of the nation new local authorities have been created wholesale . Each special need has been met by calling into existence a new special ...
... population and wealth have advanced by leaps and bounds . To provide for the growing requirements of the nation new local authorities have been created wholesale . Each special need has been met by calling into existence a new special ...
Page 25
... population is 4061 persons to the square mile , while throughout the rest of the country the average is 158 to the square mile . Towns require much more government than the country , especially in sanitary matters . Masses of human ...
... population is 4061 persons to the square mile , while throughout the rest of the country the average is 158 to the square mile . Towns require much more government than the country , especially in sanitary matters . Masses of human ...
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Common terms and phrases
administration aldermen annually appoint audit body boundaries burgesses burial board bye-laws Central Government charters church churchwardens citizen City civil parish clerk common constitution coroner councillors county court duty ecclesiastical parish Education Department England English entitled ex officio exercise expenditure expenses freemen functions fund Government Board guardians Highway Boards highway district highway parishes hold office Home Secretary inhabitants institutions jurisdiction jury justices land legislation loans Local Government Board London matters mayor ment Metropolis municipal boroughs Municipal Corporations nuisances ordinary organisation overseers owners Parliament parliamentary borough persons plural voting police political poor rate poor-law parish population powers provisional order Public Health Act purposes qualification quarter sessions ratepayers regulated relief Report rural districts rural sanitary authority rural sanitary districts school board school district sewers sheriff shire special Acts statute tion total number township unions urban sanitary authority urban sanitary districts vestry Vict vote
Popular passages
Page 157 - This series is intended to meet the demand for accessible information on the ordinary conditions, and the current terms, of our political life.
Page 160 - The following are the titles of the volumes :— 1. Central Government. HD TRAILL, DCL, late Fellow of St. John's College, Oxford. [Ready. 2. The Electorate and the Legislature. SPENCER WALPOLE, Author of " The History of England from 1815.
Page 65 - s most unblushing advocate, " made all the charters, like the walls of Jericho, fall down before him, and returned laden with surrenders, the spoils of towns.
Page 116 - Rates, or any or either of them, prospectively, in order to raise Money for the Payment of future Charges and Expenses, or retrospectively in order to raise Money for the Payment of Charges and Expenses which may have been incurred at any Time within Six Months before the making of the Rate...
Page 89 - This institution may be considered as a revival of the ancient local earldom ; and it certainly took away from the sheriff a great part of the dignity and importance which he had acquired since the discontinuance of that office. Yet the lord lieutenant has so peculiarly military an authority, that it does not in any degree control the civil power of the sheriff as the executive minister of the law.
Page 159 - The books are not intended to interpret disputed points in Acts of Parliament, nor to refer in detail to clauses or sections of those Acts ; but to select and sum up the salient features of any branch of legislation, so as to place the ordinary citizen in possession of the main points of the law. The following are the titles of the volumes : — CENTRAL GOVERNMENT.
Page 7 - ... the national Parliament, and there are the same strong reasons for plurality of votes. Only, there is not so decisive an objection, in the inferior as in the higher body, to making the plural voting depend (as in some of the local elections of our own country) on a mere money qualification : for the honest and frugal dispensation of money forms so much larger a part of the business of the local, than of the national body, that there is more justice as well as policy in allowing a greater proportional...