00925nam0 2200277 450 00000790320071019075534.020070525d1946----km-y0itay50------baitaITy-------001yy<<La >>costituzione della Repubblica cispadanaa cura di Giovanni De VergottiniFirenzeSansoni1946287 p.18 cmTesti e documenti costituzionali12001Testi e documenti costituzionali1Repubblica cispadana <1797> - Documenti340.0920De Vergottini,GiovanniRepubblica cispadana<1797>630603ITUNIPARTHENOPE20070525RICAUNIMARC000007903TDC 340/17867NAVA12007TDC 340/1(1)s.i.NAVA12007Costituzione della Repubblica cispadana1205739UNIPARTHENOPE03772nam 2200613 450 991013125610332120230621141057.01-61499-497-8(CKB)3710000000422491(MiAaPQ)EBC5161921(WaSeSS)IndRDA00056327(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/42955(EXLCZ)99371000000042249120180113h20152015 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierChallenging the chain[electronic resource] governing the automated exchange and processing of business information. /Co authors, S. Bal [and nine others] ; edited by N. Bharosa [and three others]IOS Press2015Delft, The Netherlands :IOS Press,2015.©20151 online resource (442 pages) illustrations1-61499-496-X Includes bibliographical references.What is digital business reporting? Why do we need it? And how can we improve it? This book aims to address these questions by illustrating the rise of system-to-system information exchange and the opportunities for improving transparency and accountability. Governments around the world are looking for ways to strengthen transparency and accountability without introducing more red tape, which is a source of growing frustration and costs for businesses. In 2004, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Justice in the Netherlands started to investigate the potential of XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language) as a uniform data standard for business-to-government information exchange. In 2006, there was a comprehensive architecture for Standard Business Reporting (SBR), including the requirements for the information infrastructure. One year later the first reports in XBRL were successfully delivered to the Tax and Customs Administration and the Chamber of Commerce via a secure infrastructure. Today, millions of business reports are being exchanged using SBR. As a solution, SBR empowers organisations to present a cohesive explanation of their business operations and helps them engage with internal and external stakeholders, including regulators, shareholders and creditors. Challenging the chain describes the journey of SBR from challenge to solution. Specialists in the field – flanked by academics – provide detailed insights on the challenges actors faced and the solutions they achieved. In its versatility, this book exemplifies the necessary paradigm shifts when it comes to such large-scale public-private transformations. Policy makers, managers, IT specialists and architects looking to engage in such transformations will find guidance in this book.Business recordsBusiness recordsLaw and legislationNetherlandsCorporation reportsLaw and legislationSBRinformation exchangedigital business reportingStandard Business Reportinginformation chaintransparencyeXtensible Business Reporting LanguageXBRLaccountabilityBusiness records.Business recordsLaw and legislationCorporation reportsLaw and legislation.651.51R. van Wijk (ed.)auth1364921Bal S.Bharosa N.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQUkMaJRUBOOK9910131256103321Challenging the chain3386539UNINA