interenclave
An interenclave is a term used in political geography to describe a territorial unit that itself is an enclave within another enclave. In practice, it denotes a nested enclave: a portion of land that is surrounded by, and part of, a larger enclave, which may belong to a different state than the surrounding area.
The concept arises from historical property arrangements and treaty boundaries that produce irregular patches of sovereignty.
A well-known real-world example is found in the Baarle-Nassau and Baarle-Hertog municipalities along the Belgium–Netherlands border,
Legal and administrative realities include overlapping jurisdictions, different municipal regulations, and potential confusion for residents and
The term interenclave is not widely used in official treaties but appears in academic discussions of enclaves