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Addiction: the Financial Problem
Category: Homelessness  

Stop Drinking Alcohol.. Alcoholism vs. Alcohol Abuse
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OxyContin Addiction Is Creating Heroin Addicts
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Objective of Drug Rehab Centers
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What's Inside a Drug Rehab Center?
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Drug Rehab Center - Helps You to Start a New Life
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How to Choose a Drug Rehab Centre?
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Drug Rehabilitation in The Way You Want
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Inner Side of Drug Rehab Centers - Drugs Can Destroy Your Life
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Stop Drinking Alcohol Now ..Brain Damage and Alcohol Abuse
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Balancing Home and Career: Can we have it all?
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OxyContin Addiction - How Bad Can It Get, and How Likely Is It?
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..10 Tips
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Can You Do What An Olympic Athlete Does?
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..The Benefits of Quitting Drinking
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A Drug Addiction Treatment Center Can Keep Your Loved One Out of...
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Treatment of Drug Addiction
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Methods Used to Treat Drug Addiction
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Alcohol Rehabilitation-Withdrawal Symptoms
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Alcohol Rehabilitation-What is Addiction?
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How to help your Teen after Drug Rehab
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Advantages of Joining a Rehabilitation Centre
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Drug Rehab Program for Drug Addicted Persons
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Treating Alcohol Addiction is Possible
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How to Get Rid of Drug Addiction
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All You Need to Know About Drug Detoxification Program
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Alcohol Rehab Centers-An Overview
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Synergy Treatment - The most comfortable and effective Drug Reha...
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Hydronic Radiant Floor Heating: How Does it Work?
Category: Research  

Stop Drinking Alcohol ..Quit Drinking Now
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Alcohol and Drug Addiction Treatment Q & A: How Do I Convince So...
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Is Suicide a Sin or an Act of Bravery?
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BIFR sanctions HMT rehabilitation scheme
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..The Real Story
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Drug Addiction Treatment - What Does It Take to Make It Successf...
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A mutual shareholder or stockholder is an individual or company (including a corporation) that legally owns one or more shares of stock in a joint stock company. A company's shareholders collectively own that company. Thus, such companies strive to enhance shareholder value. Stockholders are granted special privileges depending on the class of stock, including the right to vote (usually one vote per share owned, but sometimes this is not the case) on matters such as elections to the board of directors, the right to propose shareholder resolutions, the right to share in distributions of the company's income, the right to purchase new shares issued by the company, and the right to a company's assets during a liquidation of the company. However, stockholder's rights to a company's assets are subordinate to the rights of the company's creditors. This means that stockholders typically receive nothing if a company is liquidated after bankruptcy (if the company had had enough to pay its creditors, it would not have entered bankruptcy), although a stock may have value after a bankruptcy if there is the possibility that the debts of the company will be restructured.

Stockholders or shareholders are considered by some to be a partial subset of stakeholders, which may include anyone who has a direct or indirect equity interest in the business entity or someone with even a non-pecuniary interest in a non-profit organization. Thus it might be common to call volunteer contributors to an association stakeholders, even though they are not shareholders.

Although directors and officers of a company are bound by fiduciary duties to act in the best interest of the shareholders, the shareholders themselves normally do not have such duties towards each other.

However, in a few unusual cases, some courts have been willing to imply such a duty between shareholders. For example, in California, majority shareholders of closely held corporations have a duty to not destroy the value of the shares held by minority shareholders[1].

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