states rights

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English - Turkish
(Politika, Siyaset) devlet hakları
English - English

Definition of states rights in English English dictionary

states' rights
The belief that each of the 50 U.S. states has reserved powers, the sovereign right to determine policies on some issues
states' rights
A catch phrase used by some in the Civil Rights Era as an excuse to keep the federal government from granting rights to black people by claiming such things were not federal issues
States' Rights Party
A former political party founded in 1948 by Southern Democrats to consolidate opposition to civil rights policies of the regular Democratic Party
states' rights
rights of each individual state to do things such as charge taxes and pass laws (in the United States)
states' rights
the rights conceded to the states by the United States constitution a doctrine that federal powers should be curtailed and returned to the individual states
states' rights
Rights or powers retained by the regional governments of a federal union under the provisions of a federal constitution. In the U.S., Switzerland, and Australia, the powers of the regional governments are those that remain after the powers of the central government have been enumerated in the constitution. The powers of both the state or regional and national levels of government are defined clearly by specific provisions of the constitutions of Canada and Germany. The concept of states' rights is closely related to that of the 18th-century European concept of state rights, which was invoked to legitimate the powers vested in sovereign national governments. In the U.S. before the mid-19th century, some Southern states claimed the right to annul an act of the federal government within their boundaries (see nullification), as well as the right to secede from the Union. The constitutional question was resolved against the South by the North's victory in the American Civil War. In the civil rights era, states' rights were invoked by opponents of federal efforts to enforce racial integration in public schools. The federal government can influence state policy even in areas that are constitutionally the purview of the states (e.g., education, local road construction) through withholding funds from states that fail to comply with its wishes. In the late 20th century the term came to be applied more broadly to a variety of efforts aimed at reducing the powers of national governments
states' rights democratic party
a former political party in the United States; formed in 1948 by Democrats from southern states in order to oppose to the candidacy of Harry S Truman
states rights

    Hyphenation

    States rights

    Turkish pronunciation

    steyts rayts

    Pronunciation

    /ˈstāts ˈrīts/ /ˈsteɪts ˈraɪts/
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