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  1. Legal Effects of Recognition. De jure and de facto recognitions are the modes of recognition of the State. Recognition is the declaration of existence in terms. De facto recognition is provisional. It is the primary step to de jure recognition, which is fully recognised. When a regime changes, it is an existing State letting know the political ...

  2. De facto is sometimes contrasted with de jure, which means according to law or officially. De facto has been in English for several centuries. So, like most established loanwords, it does not need to be italicized in normal use (we italicize because it’s presented as a word out of context). Examples

  3. De jure segregation, or “Jim Crow,” lasted from the 1880s to 1964. Jim Crow laws were efficient in perpetuating the idea of “White superiority” and “Black inferiority.” De facto segregation is the direct manifestation of de jure segregation, because the U.S. government could mandate that laws that segregated the races were unconstitutional, but it couldn’t change the hearts and ...

  4. De jure (in traditional Latin de iure) is an idiom that means “regarding law”, as compared with de facto, which means “in fact”. The expressions de jure and de facto are used as an alternative of “in law” and “in practice”, respectively, when one is explaining political or lawful state of affairs. ‒ Hector M Ramirez November 9 ...

  5. 30 de jan. de 2024 · The phrase “de jure” means “in law” in Latin. It refers to a policy or standard which has been established by law, in contrast with something which is “ de facto ,” or “in fact.”. These two terms are often found in use together, with people drawing a line between practices which are commonly accepted and practices which are ...

  6. 5 de fev. de 2021 · The alienation made by de facto guardians are on a par with those made by de jure guardian under the Hindu Law and if they lack justification, they are voidable and as such application of Article 44 of the Limitation Act, 1908 is an inescapable corollary which is not the position in respect of transfers made by a de facto guardian under the Mahomedan Law, where all transfers made by a de facto ...