| Cobden Club (London, England) - 1875 - 472 páginas
...rural, which have been compiled since that Act, are copious enough to fill two moderate-sized volumes. A certain degree of diversity, it is true, must be...the qualifications of the various local electorates, BKODRICB.] LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN ENGLAND. Cl differ so widely as to defy analysis and generalisation.... | |
| George Charles Brodrick - 1879 - 620 páginas
...rural, which have been compiled since that Act, are copious enough to fill two moderate-sized volumes. A certain degree of diversity, it is true, must be...electorates, differ so widely as to defy analysis and generalization. True it is that less collision and friction results from this lack of unity than it... | |
| National Association for the Promotion of Social Science (Great Britain) - 1884 - 730 páginas
...conglomeration both of areas and rates, or, as Mr. Goschen fitly describes it, ' a chaos of t> uthorities, a chaos of rates, and a chaos, worse than all, of areas.' Having thus considered the principal functions of the rural local authorities (although I have by no... | |
| Ernest Stacey Griffith - 1927 - 456 páginas
...through parliamentary action brought upon English local government in general the characterization of ' a chaos of authorities, a chaos of rates, and a chaos worse than all of areas '.2 The city proper was denied the opportunity of experiment in charter-making and was based on simpler... | |
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