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Ban (law)

A ban is a formal or informal prohibition[1] of something. Bans are formed for the prohibition of activities within a certain political territory. Some bans in commerce are referred to as embargoes. Ban is also used as a verb similar in meaning to "to prohibit".

"Banned" redirects here. For other uses, see Banned (disambiguation).

Banned political parties[edit]

In many countries political parties or groups are banned. Parties may be banned for many reasons, including extremism and anti-democratic ideologies,[2] on ethnic or religious grounds,[3] and sometimes simply because the group opposes government policies, with the ban sometimes alleging wrongdoing as the cause.[4] Germany, for instance, has a long history behind its modern practice of banning political parties. The Nazi Party was banned in 1923; after the Nazi Party came into power in 1933 opposing parties such as the Social Democrats (SPD) and Communist Party of Germany (KPD) were banned, the Nazi Party was again banned and the ban on other parties lifted after the Nazi defeat in 1945, and the Communist Party was again banned from 1956 to 1968.

Banning marriages[edit]

There have been many bans on marriages, and sometimes other sexual liaisons, between people of different ethnic background or religion, for example between non-Jews and Jews in Nazi Germany, people classified as "white" and non-whites in apartheid South Africa, etc.


For much of the 1800s and 1900s there were bans on marriage between people of different races (interracial marriage) in many of the United States. However, the ban on interracial marriage was overturned by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1967 in the landmark civil rights case Loving vs. Virginia, in which the Court ruled Virginia's miscegenation law an unconstitutional violation of the fundamental right to marriage. Historically child marriage was common, but is now banned in many countries.

Banned people[edit]

Holy Roman Empire[edit]

The Imperial ban was a form of outlawry in the Holy Roman Empire. At different times, it could be declared by the Holy Roman Emperor, by courts including the League of the Holy Court (German: Vehmgericht, pronounced [ˈfeːmɡəʁɪçt]) and the Reichskammergericht, or by the Imperial Diet. People under Imperial ban lost all their rights and possessions, and anyone had the right to rob, injure or kill such persons without legal consequences. The Imperial ban automatically followed the excommunication of a person, and extended to anyone offering help to a person under the imperial ban.

Health and safety[edit]

Bans in various jurisdictions on possession of some weapons, smoking, and narcotic drugs are enacted to exert control over the general public.

Ban (medieval)

and Excommunication, which may result in a ban pursuant to religious law

Censure

Export restriction

a ban pursuant to Jewish law

Herem (censure)

and the sovereign state of exception

Homo sacer

List of banned books

List of banned computer and video games

List of banned films

List of banned political parties

List of people subject to banning orders under apartheid

List of websites blocked in China

Ostracism

—usually referring to historical and current laws regulating prohibition of alcohol

Prohibition

practiced in the Amish community

Shunning

Use of performance-enhancing drugs in sport

The dictionary definition of ban at Wiktionary

. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 305–306.

"Ban"