Sentences with phrase «jure on»

Not exact matches

It is done through statutory, de jure, legislated, on the books, by law, spirit, letter and intent, permissions, control and domination.
On the other hand, persons with de facto but not de jure authority enjoy no such right.
Also, another view on this is given by the Palestinian sociologist Elia Zureik; in 1979, he made a distinction: he argued that Israel was not in de jure an Apartheid state but in de facto An Aparthied state; he said, that Israeli civic society was characterised by a latent form of Apartheid but juridically, given what is laid down in Israels Basic Law, it was not.
In doing so, ideas such as de jure and de facto segregation — important terms in the court's decision on Boston Public Schools — will bubble to the surface.
Now when the player launches a new campaign in Crusader Kings II, he will be able to turn a wide number of mechanics on or off and choose more options for a few others: Shattered Retreats, Defensive Pacts, Gender Equality - Default / Historical / All / Players, Sunset Invasion - 13th Century / Random / Off, Mongol Invasion - Historical / Random / Off, Raiding - Historical / Unrestricted / None, Epidemics - Dynamic / Historical / Deadly, Supernatural Events, Adventurers - Normal / Rare / None, Provincial Revolts - Normal / Rare / None, Regencies, De Jure Drift - Default / Restricted / Off, Dynamic Kingdoms and Empires, and Diplomatic Range.
And as the Times story earlier this week and others have pointed out, pollution controls will de factor be lax even if de jure they are strong — because the makers will skimp on the suspensions so the pollution controls will be shaken up, to say the least.
Others that I happen to have on my bookmark list include BriefHelp.com, LawRite, Legal Research Center, Legal Research Service of Maryland, National Legal Research Group, Quo Jure Corp., and LegalScope Research.
On some level, the de jure aspects have, but the de facto realities of communities of color today are just extraordinarily, extraordinarily problematic.
For the last 33 years, since October of 1982 when Reagan formally declared a War on Drugs, the impact that that has had on black and brown communities, and particularly the level of disenfranchisement that has afforded black men in the United States, and so when you look at the statistics and you look at the racial realities, what you don't have anymore is a de jure structural racism to the extent that we did 50 and 60 years ago, but the de facto structural racism is extraordinary.
Does war have to be declared on a de jure state?
Seeing this dichotomy raises the question: who has a more defined de facto ownership of property, the street person with their nomadic and unfettered existence on their stake of a piece of public property, or the de jure property owners in the condominium units above?
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