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The Real decreto (Spanish for "Royal decree"), in Spanish law, is a provision approved by the Prime Minister of Spain or by the Council of Ministers, adopted by virtue of its regulatory power. [1] As such, it is hierarchically inferior to the law , although superior to other regulatory norms .
In Belgium, a royal decree [1] (RD) or royal order (Koninklijk Besluit ⓘ in Dutch, Arrêté Royal in French, or Königlicher Erlass in German) is a federal government decree implementing legislation, or exercising powers the legislature has delegated to the crown as secondary legislation. Under the Constitution of Belgium, the king cannot act ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. ... Royal Decree 56 of 2002; Royal Decree of ...
The Decree-Law may not affect the legal system of the basic State institutions. The Decree-Law may not affect the rights, duties and freedoms of the citizens contained in Part I of the Constitution. The Decree-Law may not affect the system of Self-governing of the Autonomous Communities. The Decree-Law may not affect the General Electoral Law.
A Royal Legislative Decree is a legal rule having the force of a law in the Spanish legal system.The name of "Royal" is given because it has state rank and it is the King who is responsible for sanctioning and ordering the publication and compliance of the rule and the name of "Legislative" is given because it is a delegation from parliament.
It also granted free land to many settlers, as well as incentives for investing money and providing technology for agricultural development to Spaniards willing to relocate and settle there. [1] This was the third royal decree of graces approved by the Spanish Crown to foster economic development in the empire's overseas Latin American possessions.
According to Royal Decree 181/2008 [1] of 8 February, the BOE is the official journal of the Kingdom of Spain, providing the State Government the means to publish mandatory laws, regulations and other acts approved by the parliaments. It therefore contains a comprehensive list of all Laws passed in parliament, the provisions adopted by the ...
As King Charles I of England would not assent to bills from a Parliament at war with him, decrees of Parliament before the Third English Civil War were styled 'ordinances'. [1] The Rump Parliament reverted to using the term 'act' on 6 January 1649 when it passed the Act erecting a High Court of Justice for the trial of the King (when any ...