De jure is a legal term that means "according to the law". A de jure claim concerns something that may legally be the case, but this says nothing about whether the action or claim is de facto legal, i.e. it can be done.
For example, jaywalking is de jure illegal. This means that there are laws forbidding jaywalking. However, those laws are rarely enforced, which is why it is rare to hear of someone fined for jaywalking. Selling heroin is also de jure illegal, but this law is more often enforced.
De jure is a legal term that means "according to the law". A de jure claim concerns something that may legally be the case, but this says nothing about whether the action or claim is de facto legal, i.e. it can be done.
For example, jaywalking is de jure illegal. This means that there are laws forbidding jaywalking. However, those laws are rarely enforced, which is why it is rare to hear of someone fined for jaywalking. Selling heroin is also de jure illegal, but this law is more often enforced.
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jure power = legislation ;facto power=justice
De jure belli ac pacis was created in 1625.
It began when the Supreme Court first approved of de jure segregation inPlessyv.Ferguson(1896)
De jure translates from Latin to English as, "to law." As an adverb, de jure refers to conditions created by enacted law, as opposed to "de facto," conditions created by social or economic circumstances, but not by law.For example, the US Supreme Court declared de jure racial segregation [enacted laws] unconstitutional, but many inner-city schools suffer de facto segregation because the school district serves an area populated by lower income African-American families.
"De jure" means "concerning law" while "de facto" means "concerning fact". A state may be de jure sovereign without being de facto sovereign, because a greater nation maintains economic or political hegemony over them, as Syria did with Lebanon. Or vice versa: de facto sovereign without being de jure sovereign, like the tribal areas of Pakistan.
Custody may be characterized as 'de facto' or as 'de jure'. A 'de facto' custody refers to the custodial arrangement that 'in fact' is in effect. This arrangement may or may not tally with a 'de jure' custody. A 'de jure' custody refers to the custodial arrangement that is approved according to the particular standards and systems of law.
de facto means 'concerning fact' or 'in reality'. So de jure (concerning law) equality would mean equality in law (but not necessarily in fact) and de facto equality would mean equality in practice. A good real life example is race relations in the US. The 1965 Civil Rights Act ended de jure discrimination and inequality in America, but de facto discrimination and inequality persisted.
De facto means in fact, and de jure means in law. De Jure slavery would refer to legalised slavery. De facto slavery would not be in a legal sense, but would be the situation nonetheless.
The country is not stated in the question. However, in the US, De Jure segragation no longer exists.
According to dictionary.reference, the first recorded use of "de jure" was in the 1610s.The legal term translates from Latin to English as, "to law." As an adverb, de jure refers to conditions created by enacted law, as opposed to "de facto," conditions created by social or economic circumstances, but not by law.
De facto in 1901, de jure in 1953.
De jure standards are standards that have been approved by standard bodies, professional organizations, industry groups, a government body, or other groups.