Nonprofit corporation/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

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{{rpl|501(c)(2)}}
{{rpl|501(c)(2)}}
{{rpl|501(c)(3)}} In U.S. tax law, an organization that has been determined to be nonprofit and nonpolitical; contributions to it are tax-deductible; it can engage in research and education but not efforts to affect specific policy or legislation, often a delicate line.
{{rpl|501(c)(3)}} In U.S. tax law, an organization that has been determined to be nonprofit and nonpolitical; contributions to it are tax-deductible; it can engage in research and education but not efforts to affect specific policy or legislation, often a delicate line.
{{rpl|501(c)(4)}}
{{rpl|501(c)(4)}} In U.S. tax law, an organization that has been determined to be nonprofit, but may be political; contributions to it are '''not''' tax-deductible; it can engage in research and education, affect specific policy or legislation, but not directly contribute to candidates or campaign for or against them.
{{rpl|501(c)(5)}}
{{rpl|501(c)(5)}}
{{rpl|501(c)(6)}}
{{rpl|501(c)(6)}}

Revision as of 08:54, 8 January 2024

This article is developed but not approved.
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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Nonprofit corporation.
See also changes related to Nonprofit corporation, or pages that link to Nonprofit corporation or to this page or whose text contains "Nonprofit corporation".


Parent topics

  • Incorporation: The legal act of creating, establishing or founding a commercial, nonprofit or public corporation. The act is typically facilitated and symbolized by a constitutional document termed the articles of incorporation. [e]
  • Stub Corporation (general): A legal entity that is distinct from its owners and may employ people, buy and sell assets, and lend or borrow money; it is jointly owned by shareholders, who participate in its profits but are not personally liable for its debts. [e]
  • Developing Article Social enterprise: Any organization or program that advances a social mission through entrepreneurial, earned income strategies; the category of social enterprise may, in specific uses, transcend more conventional profit/nonprofit and government/nongovernment distinctions. [e]

Subtopics

Other related topics

  • Developing Article Nonprofit organization: An organization that is institutionalized, private, separate from government, not profit distributing, self-governing and voluntary. [e]
  • Section 527: Political associations and organizations (political parties and interest groups) engaged in political campaigns are governed by a separate section of the IRS code (Section 527) and subject to different rules and reporting requirements. [e]
  • Trust Funds: Add brief definition or description