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A condominium (plural either condominia, as in Latin, or condominiums) in international law is a territory (such as a border area or a state) in or over which multiple sovereign powers formally agree to share equal dominium (in the sense of sovereignty) and exercise their rights jointly, without dividing it into "national" zones.

Although a condominium has always been recognized as a theoretical possibility, condominia have been rare in practice. A major problem, and the reason so few have existed, is the difficulty of ensuring co-operation between the sovereign powers; once the understanding fails, the status is likely to become untenable.

The word is recorded in English since 1718, from Modern Latin, apparently coined in Germany c. 1700 from Latin con- 'together' + dominium 'right of ownership' (compare domain). A condominium of three sovereign powers is sometimes called a tripartite condominium or tridominium.

Current condominiaEdit

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Co-principalityEdit

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Under French law, Andorra was once considered to be a French–Spanish condominium, although it is more commonly classed as a co-principality, since it is itself a sovereign state, not a possession of one or more foreign powers. However, the position of head of state is shared ex officio by two foreigners, one of whom is the President of France, currently Emmanuel Macron, and the other the Bishop of Urgell in Spain, currently Joan Enric Vives i Sicília.<ref>Coprince d'Andorre, Hollande rend visite à la principauté Template:Webarchive, Le Parisien, 12 June 2014</ref>

Former condominiaEdit

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Independent State of Croatia (NDH). This was in fact, Italo-German condominium, [...]".</ref><ref>John R. Lampe (ed.), Mark Mazower (ed.). Ideologies and National Identities: The Case of Twentieth-Century Southeastern Europe. Central European University Press, 2003. p. 103. "[...] the Independent State of Croatia (hereafter NDH, Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska), in reality an Italo-German condominium [...]"</ref>

  • Canton and Enderbury Islands were a British–American condominium from 1939 until 1979 when they became part of Kiribati.
  • Couto Misto was shared until 1864 between Spain and Portugal, even though in its final decades of existence it was de facto independent.
  • Egypt from 1876 to 1882 was under France and the United Kingdom.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Proposed condominiaEdit

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Croatian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mate Granić subsequently claimed that the idea was rejected by him in 1994.<ref name="Slobodna Dalmacija">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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