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  1. 1 de ago. de 2022 · Yes. No. The University of Oxford is an exempt charity under the terms of the Charities Act 2011 and its principal regulatory body is the Office for Students.

  2. The University of Oxford has thirty-nine colleges, and four permanent private halls (PPHs) of religious foundation. Colleges (with the exception of three 'societies of the university') and PPHs are autonomous self-governing corporations within the university.

  3. Colleges are academic communities, where students usually have their tutorials. Each one has its own dining hall, bar, common room and library, and lots of college groups and societies. All undergraduate students at Oxford become members of a particular college, and of the whole University.

  4. The universities of England and Wales, including the colleges and halls of Oxford, Cambridge and Durham, Footnote 2 comprised one such category of exempt charity.

  5. Oxford is an independent and self-governing institution consisting of the University, its divisions, departments and faculties, and the colleges. The colleges and halls. The 36 colleges and three societies are a core element of the University, to which they are related via a federal system.

  6. The University of Oxford (i.e. the Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford) has full charitable status. However, it is exempt from the requirement to register as a charity with the Charity Commission.

  7. We donate to a wide range of charities catering for severely disadvantaged groups and neighbourhoods in the Oxford community, in particular volunteer organisations that provide food, pre-school and extra-curricular education, participation in sport and the performing arts, English-language tuition, support for the mentally disabled and ...