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sunsetclausules

Sunsetclausules are provisions in contracts, statutes, or policy documents that set an explicit expiration date or condition under which the agreement ends automatically. They may require renewal, amendment, or reauthorization to continue beyond the sunset date.

Origin and naming: The term combines "sunset," referring to an agreement ending at twilight, with "clause," the

Common contexts: In legislation, sunsetclauses are used to compel legislative review or renewal; in corporate and

Mechanics and features: A sunsetclausule states an expiration date or event, may specify automatic termination unless

Impact and debates: Proponents argue they provide accountability, limit entrenchment, and allow policy recalibration. Critics contend

Examples: A 5-year contract with a sunsetclausule that ends the deal unless both parties sign a renewal;

contractual
provision.
The
plural
form
"sunsetclausules"
is
used
in
some
legal
writing
to
discuss
multiple
such
provisions
across
documents.
commercial
agreements,
they
limit
long-term
commitments
or
mandates;
in
regulatory
or
tax
policy,
they
force
reassessment
of
rules
or
incentives.
renewed,
and
can
include
transitional
arrangements
or
alternative
provisions.
Some
versions
are
coupled
with
a
renewal
trigger
or
a
sunset
review
process
that
requires
new
approval.
they
create
uncertainty,
bias
renewal
outcomes,
or
cause
abrupt
terminations
without
time
for
negotiation.
a
tax
incentive
that
expires
after
2028
unless
renewed
by
lawmakers.