Jura Consultants Limited
Jura Consultants Limited
Financial Snapshot
Directors
Name | Role | Appointed ↓ | Nationality | Age |
---|---|---|---|---|
Paul Robert Jardine | Economic Consultant | 30/06/1999 | British | 63 years |
People with Significant Control
Name | Nature of Control | Notified On | Nationality |
---|---|---|---|
Paul Robert Jardine | Ownership Of Shares 75 To 100 Percent, Voting Rights 75 To 100 Percent, Right To Appoint And Remove Directors | 06/05/2016 | British |
Financial Accounts
May 2024 | May 2023 | May 2022 | |
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Charges
Properties
No property information available
Grants
Total grant funding received: £56,454.00
Programme | |||
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01/04/2019 | £26,640.00 | Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport | ALB - Historic England - Heritage Protection Commissions-fy 19/20 |
Historic England has commissioned research to explore the attributive link between the advice it provides to local authorities on specific projects within the planning system and the creation of heritage, economic and social outcomes. The research will test the hypothesis that advice provided by Historic England contributes to improved heritage outcomes which in turn create additional, enhanced or greater economic and social benefits. This hypothesis will be tested via a staged process. In phase 1, the research will deliver 4 case studies, potentially selected from a dataset created as part of a previous research study. The case study research will include a review of available documents related to the project, advice provided by Historic England and consultation with stakeholders and developers involved in the project. The team will collect evidence from developers and published statistical data sources to explore the impact of projects, and critically the impact of Historic England advice. The findings of the case studies will be used to inform the methodology for a larger, main study that will use statistical analyses to compare the impact of projects for which Historic England advice was influential and a cohort of projects for which Historic England advice was not influential. This comparison is intended to assist in isolating the benefit created by Historic England advice from that which would have been created anyway. | |||
01/04/2018 | £29,814.00 | Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport | ALB-Historic England - Heritage Protection Commissions-fy 18/19 |
Historic England has commissioned research to explore the attributive link between the advice it provides to local authorities on specific projects within the planning system and the creation of heritage, economic and social outcomes. The research will test the hypothesis that advice provided by Historic England contributes to improved heritage outcomes which in turn create additional, enhanced or greater economic and social benefits. This hypothesis will be tested via a staged process. In phase 1, the research will deliver 4 case studies, potentially selected from a dataset created as part of a previous research study. The case study research will include a review of available documents related to the project, advice provided by Historic England and consultation with stakeholders and developers involved in the project. The team will collect evidence from developers and published statistical data sources to explore the impact of projects, and critically the impact of Historic England advice. The findings of the case studies will be used to inform the methodology for a larger, main study that will use statistical analyses to compare the impact of projects for which Historic England advice was influential and a cohort of projects for which Historic England advice was not influential. This comparison is intended to assist in isolating the benefit created by Historic England advice from that which would have been created anyway. |
Historic England has commissioned research to explore the attributive link between the advice it provides to local authorities on specific projects within the planning system and the creation of heritage, economic and social outcomes. The research will test the hypothesis that advice provided by Historic England contributes to improved heritage outcomes which in turn create additional, enhanced or greater economic and social benefits. This hypothesis will be tested via a staged process. In phase 1, the research will deliver 4 case studies, potentially selected from a dataset created as part of a previous research study. The case study research will include a review of available documents related to the project, advice provided by Historic England and consultation with stakeholders and developers involved in the project. The team will collect evidence from developers and published statistical data sources to explore the impact of projects, and critically the impact of Historic England advice. The findings of the case studies will be used to inform the methodology for a larger, main study that will use statistical analyses to compare the impact of projects for which Historic England advice was influential and a cohort of projects for which Historic England advice was not influential. This comparison is intended to assist in isolating the benefit created by Historic England advice from that which would have been created anyway.
Historic England has commissioned research to explore the attributive link between the advice it provides to local authorities on specific projects within the planning system and the creation of heritage, economic and social outcomes. The research will test the hypothesis that advice provided by Historic England contributes to improved heritage outcomes which in turn create additional, enhanced or greater economic and social benefits. This hypothesis will be tested via a staged process. In phase 1, the research will deliver 4 case studies, potentially selected from a dataset created as part of a previous research study. The case study research will include a review of available documents related to the project, advice provided by Historic England and consultation with stakeholders and developers involved in the project. The team will collect evidence from developers and published statistical data sources to explore the impact of projects, and critically the impact of Historic England advice. The findings of the case studies will be used to inform the methodology for a larger, main study that will use statistical analyses to compare the impact of projects for which Historic England advice was influential and a cohort of projects for which Historic England advice was not influential. This comparison is intended to assist in isolating the benefit created by Historic England advice from that which would have been created anyway.
Group Structure
No group structure information available
Government Council Contracts Beta
Council Partners
Company Filings
Date | Category | Description | Document |
---|---|---|---|
06/05/2025 | Persons With Significant Control | Change To A Person With Significant Control | View (2 pages) |
30/09/2024 | Accounts | Accounts With Accounts Type Total Exemption Full | View (10 pages) |
23/05/2024 | Confirmation Statement | Confirmation Statement With No Updates | View (3 pages) |
05/10/2023 | Accounts | Accounts With Accounts Type Total Exemption Full | View (10 pages) |
19/05/2023 | Confirmation Statement | Confirmation Statement With No Updates | View (3 pages) |
21/02/2023 | Address | Change Registered Office Address Company With Date Old Address New Address | View (1 page) |
18/08/2022 | Accounts | Accounts With Accounts Type Total Exemption Full | View (11 pages) |
Change To A Person With Significant Control
Change Registered Office Address Company With Date Old Address New Address