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Established as a non-profit corporation, BDC received its 501c3 status in 1992. Over the last three decades, BDC has continuously evolved and currently operates as the city's principal economic development agency. [1] [2] In its developmental journey, BDC made significant strides.
The Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC; French: Banque de développement du Canada) is a Crown corporation and national development bank wholly owned by the Government of Canada, mandated to help create and develop Canadian businesses through financing, growth and transition capital, venture capital and advisory services, with a focus on small and medium-sized enterprises.
Economics Letters is a scholarly peer-reviewed journal of economics that publishes concise communications (letters) that provide a means of rapid and efficient dissemination of new results, models and methods in all fields of economic research.
The Drift (magazine) Good; Harper's Magazine; Interview; Latterly (defunct) The Liberator Magazine; Life; McClure's (defunct) McSweeney's; National Geographic; New York Magazine; The New York Review of Books; The New Yorker; Nuestro; People; Print; Reader's Digest; The Saturday Evening Post; Smithsonian; Vanity Fair; Vanity Fair (1913–1936)
Whereas non-open access journals cover publishing costs through access tolls such as subscriptions, site licenses or pay-per-view charges, open-access journals are characterised by funding models which do not require the reader to pay to read the journal's contents, relying instead on author fees or on public funding, subsidies and sponsorships.
The MWD's general manager was placed on leave amid an investigation into complaints. Adel Hagekhalil says the accusations against him are unfounded. Embattled manager of California water agency ...
The Press Complaints Commission (PCC) was a voluntary regulatory body for British printed newspapers and magazines, consisting of representatives of the major publishers. The PCC closed on Monday 8 September 2014, and was replaced by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO), chaired by Sir Alan Moses.
From the late 16th to the 18th centuries, books were published by subscription in English-speaking areas including Britain, Ireland, and British America.Subscriptions were an alternative to the prevailing mode of publication, whereby booksellers would buy authors' manuscripts outright and produce and sell books on their own initiative.