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"De Facto" redirects here. For the American band, see De Facto (band).
"Defacto" redirects here. For the steamship, see SS Defacto.
Look up de facto in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
De facto is a Latin expression that means "by [the] fact." In law, it means "in practice but not necessarily ordained by law" or "in practice or actuality, but without being officially established." It is commonly used in contrast to de jure (which means "concerning the law") when referring to matters of law, governance, or technique (such as standards) that are found in the common experience as created or developed without or contrary to a regulation. When discussing a legal situation, de jure designates what the law says, while de facto designates action of what happens in practice. It is analogous and similar to the expressions "for all intents and purposes" or "in fact."
Contents
1 Examples
1.1 Segregation (during the United States' Civil Rights era)
1.2 Standards
1.3 National languages
1.4 Politics
2 Other usages
3 See also
4 References
Examples
Segregation (during the United States' Civil Rights era)
'De facto' racial discrimination and segregation in the USA during the 1950s and 1960s was simply discrimination that was not segregation by law (de jure).
London fashion week: Burberry at Piccadilly Circus
Beneath the statue of Eros a small crowd gathers to watch the labels A/W 2011 catwalk show, live on the advertising screens The steps beneath the Eros statue at Piccadilly Circus have become the de facto front row. Tourists are still posing for photographs with their families but are fast being outnumbered by groups of chattering fashion students who have gathered to watch the autumn/winter 2011 ...
de facto: West's Encyclopedia of American Law (Full Article ...
de facto adv. In reality or fact; actually. adj. Actual: de facto segregation. Exercising power or serving a function without being legally or
Jim Crow Laws, which were enacted in the 1870s, brought legal racial segregation against African Americans residing in the Southeastern USA. These laws were legally ended in 1964 by the Civil Rights Act of 1964.123
Continued practices of expecting African Americans to ride in the back of buses or to step aside onto the street if not enough room was present for a Caucasian person and "separate but equal" facilities are instances of de facto segregation. The NAACP fought for the de jure law to be upheld and for de facto segregation practices to be abolished.
Standards
A de facto standard is a standard (formal or informal) that has achieved a dominant position, by tradition, enforcement, or market dominance. It has not necessarily received formal approval by way of a standardization process, and may not have an official standards document.
National languages
This section needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2007)
Several de facto English-speaking countries have no de jure official national language, such as Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In addition, although the official languages of the Republic of Ireland are Irish and English,4 English is considered to be the de facto language.citation needed
Ariz. GOP looks to widen illegal-immigrant law to hospitals
Republican lawmakers want to widen Arizona's illegal immigration crackdown with a proposal to require hospitals to check on whether patients are in the country legally, causing outrage among medical professionals who fear becoming de facto immigration agents under the law.
Russian was the de facto official language of the central government and, to a large extent, republican governments of the former Soviet Union, but was not declared de jure state language until 1990. A short-lived law effected April 24, 1990, installed Russian as the sole de jure official language of the Union.5 Japan is another example of a country with no language recognized de jure.
Lebanon and Morocco are two examples where the official language is Arabic but an additional de facto language is considered to be French.
Politics
A de facto government is a government wherein all the attributes of sovereignty have, by usurpation, been transferred from those who had been legally invested with them to others, who, sustained by a power above the forms of law, claim to act and do really act in their stead.6
In politics, a de facto leader of a country or region is one who has assumed authority, regardless of whether by lawful, constitutional, or legitimate means; very frequently the term is reserved for those whose power is thought by some faction to be held by unlawful, unconstitutional, or otherwise illegitimate means, often by deposing a previous leader or undermining the rule of a current one. De facto leaders need not hold a constitutional office, and may exercise power in an informal manner.
Third-place battle is rarefied air for ISU
Indiana State’s disappointment in losing 71-65 to Morehead State for its BracketBusters commitment has largely subsided because there’s a bigger fish for the Sycamores to fry in the Missouri Valley Conference men’s basketball race.
DeFacto
Gen??lere y??nelik spor giyim imalat??; kurumsal bilgiler, f??rsatlar, koleksiyon, ma??azalar ve ileti??im bilgileri.
Not all dictators are de facto rulers. For example, Augusto Pinochet of Chile initially came to power as the chairperson of a military junta, which briefly made him de facto leader of Chile, but then he later amended the nation's constitution and made himself president for life, making him the formal and legal ruler of Chile. Similarly, Saddam Hussein's formal rule of Iraq is often recorded as beginning in 1979, the year he assumed the Presidency of Iraq. However, his de facto rule of the nation began at an earlier date—during his time as vice president he exercised a great deal of power at the expense of the elderly, legal ruler, Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr.
In Argentina, the successive military coups that overthrew constitutional governments, installed de facto governments in 1930, 1943–1945, 1955–1958, 1966–1973 and 1976-1983 which combined the powers of the presidential office to those of the National Congress. The subsequent legal analysis of the validity of their actions led to the formulation of a doctrine of the "de facto" governments. That doctrine was nullified by the constitutional reform of 1994. The Article 36 states: "This Constitution shall rule even when its observance is interrupted by acts of force against the constitutional order and the democratic system. These acts shall be irreparably null. Their authors will be subject to the penalties provided in Section 29, disqualified in perpetuity from holding any public office, and excluded from the benefits of amnesty or commutation of sentences (...) All citizens have the right to resist these acts of force."
UK PM hails Middle East changes
Momentous changes are taking place in the Middle East, UK Prime Minister David Cameron says, as he again condemns the violent crackdown in Libya.
Defacto legal definition of Defacto. Defacto synonyms by the ...
What is Defacto? Meaning of Defacto as a legal term. What does Defacto mean in law? ... An officer de facto is frequently considered as an officer de jure, and his official ...
Another example of a de facto ruler is someone who is not the actual ruler, but exerts great or total influence over the true ruler, which is quite common in monarchies. Some examples of these de facto rulers are Empress Dowager Cixi of China (for son Tongzhi and nephew Guangxu Emperors), Prince Alexander Menshikov (for his former lover Empress Catherine I of Russia), Cardinal Richelieu of France (for Louis XIII), and Queen Marie Caroline of Naples and Sicily (for her husband King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies).
Some notable true de facto leaders have been Deng Xiaoping of the People's Republic of China and General Manuel Noriega of Panama. Both of these men exercised near-total control over their respective nations for many years, despite not having either legal constitutional office or the legal authority to exercise power. These individuals are today commonly recorded as the "leaders" of their respective nations; recording their legal, correct title would not give an accurate assessment of their power. Terms like strongman or dictator are often used to refer to de facto rulers of this sort.
The term de facto head of state is sometimes used to describe the office of a governor general in the Commonwealth realms, since the holder of that office has the same responsibilities in their country as the de jure head of state (the sovereign) does within the United Kingdom.
Cameron sweeps into Cairo to woo new leaders
BRITISH Prime Minister David Cameron yesterday became the first foreign leader to visit Cairo since the fall of Hosni Mubarak, styling himself as the friend of a revolution that remains unfinished.
actualizaciones de mis compaeros de temtica en este curso en la primera persona que pienso es Sara Freire pues su blog es el que ms se acerca a lo que esta bitcora pretenda ser De su blog MSICA EN PUBLICIDAD me ha gustado especialmente la actualizacin que titul La primavera ya ha llegado a la ciudad en la que haca referencia al anuncio de
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de facto - definition of de facto by the Free Online ...
Information about de facto in the free online English dictionary and encyclopedia. ... existing in fact, whether legally recognized or not a de facto regime Compare de jure ...
In the Westminster system of government, executive authority is often split between a de jure executive authority of a head of state and a de facto executive authority of a prime minister and cabinet who implement executive powers in the name of the de jure executive authority. In the United Kingdom, the Sovereign is the de jure executive authority, even though executive decisions are made by the electedverification needed Prime Minister and his Cabinet on the Sovereign's behalf, hence the term Her Majesty's Government.
The de facto boundaries of a country are defined by the area that its government is actually able to enforce its laws in, and to defend against encroachments by other countries that may also claim the same territory de jure. The line of control in Kashmir is an example of a de facto boundary. As well as cases of border disputes, de facto boundaries may also arise in relatively unpopulated areas when the border was never formally established, or when the agreed border was never surveyed and its exact position is unclear. The same concepts may also apply to a boundary between provinces or other subdivisions of a federal state.
Envoy to Taiwan apologizes over deportation
GOING against an earlier statement by Malacañang, the head of the Philippines' de facto embassy to Taiwan apologized over the deportation of 14 Taiwanese nationals to China. In an article posted on the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Taiwan, Manila Economic and Cultural Office (Meco) Chairman Amadeo Perez was quoted expressing apologies during his meeting with Taiwan Foreign ...
de facto - Wiktionary
From Latin de facto, de ("from") + ablative of factum ("fact, deed, act" ... ( Often opposed to de jure.) Although the United States currently has no official language, ...
Similarly, a nation with de facto independence, like Somaliland, is one that is not recognized by other nations or by international bodies, even though it has its own government that exercises absolute control over its claimed territory.7891011
Other usages
A de facto monopoly is a system where many suppliers of a product are allowed, but the market is so completely dominated by one that the others might as well not exist. (Similarly for related terms such as "oligopoly" and "monopsony.") This is the type of situation that antitrust laws are intended to eliminate, when they are used.
A domestic partner outside marriage is referred to as a de facto husband or wife by some authorities.12 In Australia and New Zealand, de facto has become a term for one's domestic partner. In Australian law, it is the legally recognized relationship of a couple living together (opposite-sex or same-sex). This is comparable to common-law marriage, which is used in most other English-speaking countries.
In finance the World Bank has a pertinent definition:
A "de facto government" comes into, or remains in, power by means not provided for in the country's constitution, such as a coup d'état, revolution, usurpation, abrogation or suspension of the constitution.13
See also
De jure
List of Latin phrases
References
^ Civil Rights Act of 1964
^ Woodward, C. Vann and McFeely, William S. The Strange Career of Jim Crow. 2001, page 7
^ King, Desmond. Separate and Unequal: Black Americans and the US Federal Government. 1995, page 3.
^ Constitution of Ireland, art. 8
^ "USSR Law "On the Languages of the Peoples of USSR"" (in Russian). http://www.bestpravo.ru/ussr/data01/tex10935.htm.
^ 30 Am Jur 181. Law Dictionary, James A. Ballentine, Second Edition, 1948, p. 345.
^ Arieff, Alexis (November 2008). "De facto Statehood? The Strange Case of Somaliland". Yale Journal of International Affairs. http://yalejournal.org/article/de-facto-statehood-strange-case-somaliland. Retrieved 2010-01-04. dead link
^ Wiren, Robert (April 2008). "France recognizes de facto Somaliland". Les Nouvelles d'Addis Magazine. http://www.lesnouvelles.org/P10_magazine/15_grandentretien/15055_mahamudsalahnur_eng.html. Retrieved 2010-01-04.
^ "The Digital Somali Library". Indiana University. http://www.indiana.edu/~libsalc/african/Digital_Somali_Library/internet.html. Retrieved 2010-01-04.
^ Noor, Saad (June 2008). "Somaliland: Past, Present and Future". United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs. http://allafrica.com/download/resource/main/main/id/00010917.pdf. Retrieved 2010-01-04.
^ Cooper, Jason (May 2007). "Somaliland Requests International Recognition". The Somaliland Times. http://www.somalilandtimes.net/sl/2007/277/091.shtml. Retrieved 2010-01-04.
^ Walker Lenore E.A. "Battered Woman Syndrome. Empirical Findings." Violence and Exploitation Against Women and Girls, November 2006, p. 142.
^ "OP 7.30 - Dealings with De Facto Governments". Operational Manual. The World Bank. July 2001. http://go.worldbank.org/UHU8EMUDZ0. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
Idea Cellular Faces Fine For Breaching Indian Merger Rules
Idea Cellular has strongly denied the allegations.
De Facto (band) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
De Facto specializes in kooky, whimsical, and very eclectic instrumental grooves, the ... Any future re-groupings of De Facto appeared highly unlikely due to the death of ...
Iran opposition condemned after deadly protest
TEHRAN : Lawmakers on Tuesday demanded opposition leaders they say are backed by Iran's arch-foes be hanged following violent anti-government protests in Tehran which left one person killed.
Defacto Relationships
Armstrong Legal are Australian Family Lawyers located in Sydney, specialising in legal matters surrounding de facto relationships.
So Much for DC’s Role as Capital Markets Center
For two years Washington, DC was the de facto capital-markets center for commercial real estate. Sure, we got the title by default - the recession and liquidity freeze of the last few years all but shut Wall Street and its securitization markets down.
De Facto Design Nottingham - Graphic Design and Advertising ...
De Facto Design, Nottingham. Award winning design agency specialising in Graphic Design, Branding, Advertising, Consultancy, Marketing, Web Design, Ecommerce, Moving ...
RBS was nicely bailed out – now it's time to bail in | Tim Gee
UK Uncut protests focus this weekend on RBS – which continues to act irresponsibly by financing the tar sands project Last week, I was admonished by an Edinburgh court , having been arrested at a protest in an RBS branch in 2010. The action consisted of the " Superglue 3 " attaching ourselves to the building with glue and politely talking to customers about the bank's role in funding climate ...














