Examples of charity in the following topics:
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- Charities: Charities channel donations from private individuals towards fighting to limit behaviors that result in negative externalities or promoting behaviors that generate positive externalities.
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- Carnegie's business philosophy was based on two principles: charity (the more fortunate should assist those who are less fortunate) and stewardship (the rich hold their money "in trust" for the rest of society, using it for any purpose society deems appropriate).
- Recognize Andrew Carnegie's business principles of charity and stewardship as the precursors to modern organizational social responsibility
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- Individuals might have turned to the church for everything from spiritual comfort, to an explanation for the tragedy, and for more mundane needs such as food and other charity.
- The trauma of the plague led to an increased piety throughout Europe, which manifested itself in the foundation of new charities, the extreme self-mortification of the flagellants, and the scapegoating of the Jews.
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- From pictures of starving children to motivate people to give to charity to using them as any excuse to ban things that children shouldn't even be aware of (e.g., guns), they are repeatedly paraded in front of audiences to appeal to their emotional protective instincts, often overriding anyone's sense of rationality .
- An picture like this could be used as an emotional appeal for a charity campaign to increase funding to families of soldiers.
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- For example, Chuck Feeney, the creator of Duty Free Shoppers, has given $4 billion to charities.
- Bill Gates has given 58% of his wealth to charity.
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- Like other subcultural and religious communities, the Islamic community has generated its own political organizations and charity organizations.
- Two weeks after Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, volunteers with an Israeli charity rescued seven Torah scrolls from the synagogue.
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- Examples of unpaid workers include members of a family or cooperative; conscripts or forced labor; volunteer workers who work for charity or amusement; students who take intern positions as work experience; or conventional workers who are not paid because their enterprise is short of money.
- These may be members of a family or cooperative; conscripts or forced labor; volunteer workers who work for charity or amusement; students who take intern positions as work experience; or conventional workers who are not paid because their enterprise is short of money.
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- For example, a charity working with the poor might have a vision statement that reads "A World without Poverty. "
- For example, the charity above might have a mission statement as "providing jobs for the homeless and unemployed. "
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- Persuasive speeches may be given as part of a political campaign or at a charity event.
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- The Public Charity Lobbying Law gives nonprofit organizations the opportunity to spend about 5% of their revenue on lobbying without losing their nonprofit status with the Internal Revenue Service.
- Organizations must elect to use the Public Charity Law, and so increase the allowable spending on lobbying to increase to 20% for the first $500,000 of their annual expenditures.