home rule

listen to the pronunciation of home rule
الإنجليزية - التركية
özerklik
özerk yönetim(autonomy)
özerk yönetim hareketi
(Politika, Siyaset) özerk yönetim
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
The rule or government of an appendant or dependent country, as to all local and internal legislation, by means of a governing power vested in the people within the country itself, in contradistinction to a government established by the dominant country
The power of local self-government given either by the state constitution or legislation to a municipal corporation Home rule powers allow local governments to pass zoning ordinances and other land-use regulations
A political movement that sought the governing of Northern Ireland by an Irish Parliament rather than by Britain in the 1870s and 1880s
The power of a local government to adopt its own land-use regulations
Common name for the state's transferring of power to the local governments to pass regulations regarding land use
If a country or region has home rule, it has its own independent government and laws. The principle or practice of self-government in the internal affairs of a dependent country or other political unit. the right of a country or area to have its own government and laws
In the late 19th Century Britain began entertaining the idea of granting the power of local control of the government to Ireland Protestants in Ulster opposed this plan because as long as they remained part of the British parliament they were represented among the majority However, home rule would render the Catholic minority in the British government the majority in an independent Irish republic
running of a country by the citizens of that country
The power of local government to create their own general plan
self-government in local matters by a city or county that is part of a national government
Irish Home Rule
Movement to secure internal autonomy for Ireland within the British Empire. The slogan "Home Rule" was popularized in 1870 when the Home Government Association (later the Home Rule League) called for an Irish parliament. It was led from 1878 by Charles Stewart Parnell, whose obstructionist tactics in the British Parliament publicized his country's grievances. The Home Rule bills introduced by Prime Minister William E. Gladstone in 1885 and 1893 were defeated. A third bill became law in 1914 but was militantly opposed by Ulster unionists and republicans in Ireland. A system akin to home rule was established in the six counties of Ulster (Northern Ireland) in 1920. In 1921 the remaining 26 counties in the south achieved dominion status, but the link with the British Commonwealth was severed in 1949
home rule
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