DESUETUDE - significado y definición. Qué es DESUETUDE
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Qué (quién) es DESUETUDE - definición

LEGAL DOCTRINE
Desuetudo
  • Legal systems of the world.<ref>[http://www.juriglobe.ca/eng/syst-onu/index-alpha.php Alphabetical Index of the 192 United Nations Member States and Corresponding Legal Systems], Website of the Faculty of Law of the University of Ottawa</ref> Common law countries are shaded the darker pink.
  • English law generally applies in England and Wales

desuetude         
n.
Disuse, discontinuance, non-observance, obsoleteness or obsolescence.
desuetude         
[d?'sju:?tju:d, 'd?sw?-]
¦ noun formal a state of disuse.
Origin
C17 (in the sense 'cessation'): from Fr., from L. desuetudo, from desuet-, desuescere 'make unaccustomed', from de- (expressing reversal) + suescere 'be accustomed'.
Desuetude         
·noun The cessation of use; disuse; discontinuance of practice, custom, or fashion.

Wikipedia

Desuetude

In law, desuetude (; from French désuétude, from Latin desuetudo 'outdated, no longer custom') is a doctrine that causes statutes, similar legislation, or legal principles to lapse and become unenforceable by a long habit of non-enforcement or lapse of time. It is what happens to laws that are not repealed when they become obsolete. It is the legal doctrine that long and continued non-use of a law renders it invalid, at least in the sense that courts will no longer tolerate punishing its transgressors.

The policy of inserting sunset clauses into a constitution or charter of rights (as in Canada since 1982) or into regulations and other delegated/subordinate legislation made under an act (as in Australia since the early 1990s) can be regarded as a statutory codification of this jus commune doctrine.

Ejemplos de uso de DESUETUDE
1. Had they worked, they would have fallen into desuetude by now.
2. Yet if the summits had fallen into desuetude, they would almost certainly have had to be reinvented.
3. This would indeed be called "monetarist", but that epithet had not then fallen into desuetude, together with the ideas which gave it birth.
4. Can dance a little." Shane Warne, the man who single–handedly rescued leg–spin from desuetude and disrepute, arrives in Manchester today poised to become the first bowler to capture 600 Test wickets.