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Ratified

Ratified is the past participle of ratify, a verb meaning to give formal consent or validation to a proposal, agreement, treaty, or amendment. To ratify is to authorize or confirm the final acceptance by an official body or authority, thereby making the instrument legally binding or operative.

In international law, ratification marks the point at which a state formally consents to be bound by

In domestic law, ratification often concerns constitutional amendments, statutes, or other formal instruments. The process varies

The term can also appear in non-governmental contexts to indicate formal approval or confirmation of standards,

a
treaty.
A
treaty
may
be
negotiated
by
representatives
of
states,
but
most
require
domestic
approval
by
the
state’s
government
or
legislature
before
ratification.
Once
ratified,
the
treaty
is
generally
binding
on
the
state
and
may
become
enforceable
under
international
law;
some
provisions
may
come
into
force
only
after
a
specified
number
of
ratifications
or
after
a
certain
date.
by
jurisdiction:
some
systems
require
legislative
approval,
a
referendum,
or
both.
In
the
United
States,
for
example,
treaties
require
advice
and
consent
from
the
Senate
by
a
two-thirds
majority;
once
ratified,
treaties
become
part
of
the
supreme
law
of
the
land,
subject
to
judicial
interpretation.
Constitutional
amendments,
by
contrast,
typically
require
ratification
by
a
specified
proportion
of
states,
either
through
state
legislatures
or
state
ratifying
conventions.
agreements,
or
corporate
actions
by
authorized
parties.
Ratification
thereby
signals
the
completion
of
a
formal
acceptance
process
and
the
transition
from
proposal
to
enforceable
obligation.