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Bindende

Bindende is an adjective used in several West Germanic languages to denote something that creates or imposes a legal, moral, or normative obligation. It is applied to decisions, agreements, statements, or rules that require compliance or have force of law, in contrast with non-binding or advisory forms.

Etymology and cognates: Bindende derives from the verb bind (to bind or obligate). Related forms exist across

Usage in law and administration: In legal and governmental contexts, a bindende decision or binding agreement

Usage notes: The term appears in various phrases in different languages, such as bindende overeenkomsten or

See also:

- Binding (general concept)

- Non-binding

- Obligation

- Contract

- Arbitration

related
languages,
such
as
Dutch
bindend
or
bindende,
Norwegian
bindende,
Danish
bindende,
and
German
bindend/bindende,
with
the
exact
form
depending
on
gender
and
grammatical
role
in
the
noun
phrase.
is
typically
enforceable
against
the
parties
involved.
Examples
include
binding
arbitration
awards,
binding
resolutions
by
international
organizations
when
member
states
are
obligated
to
implement
them,
or
government
mandates
described
as
binding
on
citizens.
Some
instruments
or
statements
may
be
binding
in
one
sense
(legally
enforceable)
and
non-binding
in
another
(morally
or
politically
persuasive).
bindend
advies
in
Dutch,
and
bindende
avtale
or
bindende
beslutning
in
Norwegian
or
Danish.
The
level
of
enforceability
can
vary
by
jurisdiction;
some
binding
instruments
create
legal
obligations,
while
others
impose
only
formal
or
procedural
duties.