- Federal Electoral Institute (Mexico)
Mexico: Beyond single-party rule: …by the PRI), however, the Federal Electoral Institute ordered a recount of more than half of the country’s polling places. A recount of the vote in the federal legislative elections was also mandated in roughly two-thirds of the polling places. The recount of the presidential contest confirmed Peña Nieto’s victory.…
- Federal Emergency Management Agency (United States government agency)
Michael Chertoff: The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), since 2003 subordinate to DHS, bore primary responsibility for providing immediate assistance to victims of natural disasters of this sort and for managing the recovery effort. Accordingly, Chertoff was one of the federal authorities who was faulted for the slowness…
- Federal Emergency Relief Administration (United States government agency)
Franklin D. Roosevelt: The Hundred Days: The Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) granted funds to state relief agencies, and the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) employed hundreds of thousands of young men in reforestation and flood-control work. The Home Owners’ Refinancing Act provided mortgage relief for millions of unemployed Americans in danger of…
- Federal Employee Loyalty Program (United States history)
United States: The Red Scare: …in 1947, of an elaborate Federal Employee Loyalty Program, which resulted in hundreds of federal workers being fired and in several thousand more being forced to resign.
- Federal Environmental Pesticide Control Act (United States [1972])
Environmental Protection Agency: …industries and motor vehicles; the Federal Environmental Pesticide Control Act (1972); and the Clean Water Act (1972), regulating municipal and industrial wastewater discharges and offering grants for building sewage-treatment facilities. By the mid-1990s the EPA was enforcing 12 major statutes, including laws designed to control uranium mill tailings; ocean dumping;…
- Federal Express (American company)
airport: Cargo facilities: -based FedEx Corporation, which offer door-to-door delivery of small packages at premium rates. In its early years, this type of freight grew by more than 17 percent per annum. Cargo terminals for the small-package business are designed and constructed separately from conventional air-cargo terminals. They operate…
- Federal Food and Drugs Act (United States [1906])
Pure Food and Drug Act, in U.S. history, legislation passed in 1906 to ensure the sanitary preparation of consumable goods. The Pure Food and Drug Act required accurate ingredient labeling and prohibited the sale of adulterated and misbranded food and drugs in interstate commerce. As the first
- Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (United States [1938])
e-cigarette: …and drug-delivery devices under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA, FDCA, or FD&C), the organization initiated action against the import of e-cigarettes. In January 2010, following a lawsuit by an e-cigarette distributor, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that e-cigarettes did not meet the…
- federal funds rate (United States finance)
federal funds rate, interest rate used for overnight interbank lending in the United States. It is also the interest rate that is adjusted by the central bank of the United States—the Federal Reserve (“the Fed”)—to conduct monetary policy. The amount of cash that a bank holds is called its
- Federal Home Loan Bank Act (United States [1931])
United States: The Great Depression: The Federal Home Loan Bank Act sought to prop up threatened building and loan associations. But these measures failed to promote recovery or to arrest the rising tide of unemployment. Hoover, whose administrative abilities had masked severe political shortcomings, made things worse by offering negative leadership…
- Federal Home Loan Bank Board (United States government agency)
savings and loan association: Under a ruling of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which regulates federally chartered savings and loan associations, associations need not rely only on individual deposits for funds. They can borrow from other financial institutions and market mortgage-backed securities, money market certificates, and stock.
- Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (American corporation)
Freddie Mac (FHLMC), federally chartered private corporation created by the U.S. Congress in 1970 to provide continuous and affordable home financing. It is one of several government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) established since the early 20th century to help reduce the cost of credit to various
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA) (United States government agency)
Federal Housing Administration (FHA), agency within the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that was established by the National Housing Act on June 27, 1934 to facilitate home financing, improve housing standards, and increase employment in the home-construction industry in the
- Federal Housing Finance Agency (United States government agency)
Fannie Mae: …these responsibilities to the new Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
- Federal Housing Reform Act (2007, United States)
Fannie Mae: In 2007 the Federal Housing Reform Act transferred these responsibilities to the new Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
- federal indictment of Donald J. Trump (documents case)
In June 2023 Donald J. Trump became the first former U.S. president to be indicted by a federal grand jury. The 37-count indictment, filed by the office of special counsel Jack Smith, relates to the alleged mishandling of classified documents that were found at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm
- federal indictment of Donald Trump (2020 election and January 6 attack)
In August 2023 former U.S. president Donald Trump was indicted on charges that he illegally sought to overturn the lawful election of Joe Biden in 2020. The four-count, 45-page indictment sought by special counsel Jack Smith and returned by a grand jury in Washington, D.C., charges Trump with: In
- Federal Insurance Supervisory Authority (German government agency)
insurance: Government regulation: …regulation is provided by the Federal Insurance Supervisory Authority (BAV), which exercises tight control of premiums, reserves, and investments of insurers. The BAV’s regulation of life insurance, for example, allows no more than 20 percent of investments in equities.
- Federal Intelligence Service (German intelligence organization)
BND, foreign intelligence agency of the West German government. Created in April 1956, it absorbed the “Gehlen Organization,” a covert intelligence force which was created by Major General Reinhard Gehlen after World War II and which cooperated with U.S. intelligence agencies. Gehlen had headed the
- Federal Islamic Republic of the Comoros
Comoros, an independent state comprising three of the Comoro Islands in the Indian Ocean, off the coast of East Africa. A fourth island of the Comorian archipelago, Mayotte, is claimed by the country of Comoros but administered by France. The volcanic islands of the Comorian archipelago have been
- Federal Judiciary Act (United States [1789])
Oliver Ellsworth: Life: …the chief author of the Federal Judiciary Act of 1789, the principal basis ever since of the U.S. court structure.
- Federal Kidnapping Act (United States [1932])
Lindbergh baby kidnapping: The murder investigation: Congress to pass the Federal Kidnapping Act (known as the Lindbergh Law) on June 22, 1932—the day that would have been Charles’s second birthday. The Lindbergh Law made kidnapping across state lines a federal crime and stipulated that such an offense could be punished by death.
- Federal Land Policy and Management Act (United States)
natural resources law: States’ rights: …example of this is the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, pursuant to which the U.S. Department of Interior manages public lands for a mix of uses including mining, grazing, and various recreational activities. Other resource management laws are more directive, favouring a particular use (such as wilderness preservation or…
- Federal League (baseball league)
Kenesaw Mountain Landis: In 1915 the Federal League, a “third major league” operating outside the structure of organized professional baseball, brought suit against the American and National leagues. The case came before Landis, who neither granted nor denied the injunction that was requested but withheld his decision until the Federal League…
- Federal Loan Agency (United States government)
Jesse H. Jones: …appointment as director of the Federal Loan Agency. While continuing, effectively if not nominally, to superintend the former agency, he now exercised control over the Federal Housing Administration, the Export-Import Bank, and the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. A special act of Congress permitted him to carry out his activities at…
- Federal loans vs. private loans: Understanding student loan issuer types
Which loans should you get? Each year, millions of college students and their parents borrow money to cover costs. After all, it’s not just the price of tuition that’s gone up. Living expenses are also on the rise. Even with different types of federal student aid and scholarships, it’s not uncommon
- Federal Music Project (United States history)
Great Depression: Federal arts programs: …the Federal Art Project, the Federal Music Project, the Federal Writers’ Project, and the Federal Theatre Project as part of the WPA; thousands of artists, architects, and educators found work in American museums, which flourished during the Great Depression.
- Federal National Council (government body, United Arab Emirates)
United Arab Emirates: Constitutional framework: The unicameral legislature, the Federal National Council, is an advisory body made up of 40 members appointed by the individual emirates for two-year terms. A provisional constitution was ratified in 1971 and was made permanent in 1996 by the Supreme Council.
- Federal National Mortgage Association (American corporation)
Fannie Mae (FNMA), federally chartered private corporation created as a federal agency by the U.S. Congress in 1938 to ensure adequate liquidity in the mortgage market regardless of economic conditions. It is one of several government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) established since the early 20th
- Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (German intelligence organization)
intelligence: Germany: The BfV (Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution), which is part of the Ministry of the Interior, is charged with protecting the country from antidemocratic forces, particularly neo-Nazism. The agency employs some 2,500 people at its headquarters in Cologne. In addition, each German state…
- Federal Open Market Committee (United States banking)
Federal Reserve System: …12 Federal Reserve banks, the Federal Open Market Committee, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), which was authorized in 2010 by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the CFPB assumed some functions of the former Consumer Advisory Council, which existed from 1976 to 2011). There are…
- Federal Pact (Switzerland [1815])
Sonderbund: …despite the fact that the Federal Pact (constitution of 1815) had guaranteed the monasteries’ property. The seven Catholic cantons in 1843–44 agreed that they would dissociate themselves from any canton disloyal to the Federal Pact, and in 1844 the Jesuits, whom 19th-century liberals detested, were invited to take charge of…
- Federal Party (historical political party, United States)
Federalist Party, early U.S. national political party that advocated a strong central government and held power from 1789 to 1801, during the rise of the country’s political party system. The term federalist was first used in 1787 to describe the supporters of the newly written Constitution, who
- Federal Policy Committee (British political history)
Liberal Democrats: Policy and structure: …conference is wielded by the Federal Policy Committee (an innovation derived from the SDP), which consists of the party leader, the party president (the chief extraparliamentary figure in the party), and representatives of the parliamentary party, the national parties, the local councillors, and the grassroots organizations. The Policy Committee also…
- Federal Radio Commission (United States government agency)
Communications Act of 1934: Radio Act of 1927: …1927 act created a five-member Federal Radio Commission (FRC) with discretionary authority, which the secretary of commerce had lacked under the 1912 act. Commissioners were nominated by the president of the United States and were confirmed by Congress; they served overlapping terms to maintain operational continuity. No more than three…
- Federal Records Act (United States [1950])
archives: …of the national government; the Federal Records Act of 1950 authorized the establishment also of “intermediate” records repositories in the several regions into which the country has been divided by the General Services Administration. Under the federal system of government each of the states of the United States independently has…
- Federal Register (United States government publication)
executive order: …president are published in the Federal Register and are made the subjects of White House press releases.
- Federal Republic of Nigeria
Nigeria, country located on the western coast of Africa. Nigeria has a diverse geography, with climates ranging from arid to humid equatorial. However, Nigeria’s most diverse feature is its people. Hundreds of languages are spoken in the country, including Yoruba, Igbo, Fula, Hausa, Edo, Ibibio,
- Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (former federated nation [1929–2003])
Yugoslavia, former federated country that was situated in the west-central part of the Balkan Peninsula. This article briefly examines the history of Yugoslavia from 1929 until 2003, when it became the federated union of Serbia and Montenegro (which further separated into its component parts in
- Federal Reserve Act (United States [1913])
Woodrow Wilson: First term as president of Woodrow Wilson: …passed the act creating the Federal Reserve System, which remains the most powerful government agency in economic affairs. A third victory came with passage of the Clayton Antitrust Act (1914), which strengthened existing laws against anticompetitive business actions and gave labour unions relief from court injunctions. Accompanying this act was…
- Federal Reserve and the Financial Crisis, The (work by Bernanke)
Ben Bernanke: The Federal Reserve and the Financial Crisis (2013) collected a series of four lectures he had given in 2012 on the genesis and history of the Fed and on its efforts to address the 2008 financial meltdown. The Courage to Act: A Memoir of a…
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York (American bank)
Great Depression: Banking panics and monetary contraction: …been the governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York since 1914, was a significant cause of this inaction. Strong had been a forceful leader who understood the ability of the central bank to limit panics. His death left a power vacuum at the Federal Reserve and allowed leaders…
- Federal Reserve Board (United States banking)
monetary policy: The Federal Reserve System (commonly called the Fed) in the United States and the Bank of England of Great Britain are two of the largest such “banks” in the world. Although there are some differences between them, the fundamentals of their operations are almost identical and…
- Federal Reserve System (United States banking)
Federal Reserve System, central banking authority of the United States. It acts as a fiscal agent for the U.S. government, is custodian of the reserve accounts of commercial banks, makes loans to commercial banks, and oversees the supply of currency, including coin, in coordination with the U.S.
- Federal Revolution of 1899 (Bolivian history)
Bolivia: Formation of Liberal and Conservative parties: …the Conservatives in the so-called Federal Revolution of 1899. This revolt was supposedly instigated by those wishing to move the institutions of national government from Sucre (formerly Chuquisaca) to La Paz, but in reality it was primarily a power struggle between the Conservative and Liberal parties. Unfortunately for the Conservatives,…
- Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure (United States [1946])
indictment: Constitution for federal prosecutions, the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure (1946), applicable to federal district courts, provide that the indictment “shall be a plain, concise, and definite written statement of the essential facts constituting the offense charged.” No formal requirements as to commencement or conclusion are made. The federal procedure,…
- Federal Security Force (Pakistani paramilitary group)
Pakistan: Zulfikar Ali Bhutto: …around him, he formed the Federal Security Force (FSF), the principal task of which was his personal protection. In time, the FSF emerged as a paramilitary organization, and Bhutto’s demand for ever-increasing personal security raised questions about his governing style. It also opened rifts in the PPP, and it was…
- Federal Security Service (Russian government agency)
Federal Security Service (FSB), Russian internal security and counterintelligence service created in 1994 as one of the successor agencies of the Soviet-era KGB. It is responsible for counterintelligence, antiterrorism, and surveillance of the military. The FSB occupies the former headquarters of
- Federal Senate (Brazilian government)
Brazil: The legislature of Brazil: The 81-seat Federal Senate is composed of three representatives from each state and the Federal District who serve eight-year terms. Senatorial elections are held every four years, alternating between one-third (27) and the remaining two-thirds (54) of the seats. Senators are directly elected by the residents of…
- Federal Shariat Court (court, Pakistan)
Pakistan: Justice: …laws was instituted, and the Federal Shariat Court, a court of Islamic law (Sharīʿah), was set up in the 1980s; the primary purpose of this court is to ascertain whether laws passed by parliament are congruent with the precepts of Islam. The Sharīʿah system operates alongside the more secular largely…
- federal state (government)
political system: Federal systems: In federal systems, political authority is divided between two autonomous sets of governments, one national and the other subnational, both of which operate directly upon the people. Usually a constitutional division of power is established between the national government, which exercises authority over…
- Federal Story, The (work by Deakin)
Alfred Deakin: The Federal Story, his reflections on the struggle to federate Australia, was published posthumously in 1944.
- Federal student loans: Subsidized vs. unsubsidized loans
You might get one, or both, types.Paying for college can feel like a daunting task. After all, just one year of schooling can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Applying for federal student aid and looking for scholarships and grants can help you get the funding you need to cover your costs. When
- Federal style (architecture)
Federal style, American revival of Roman architecture, especially associated with Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Latrobe. It flourished from 1785 to 1820 and later in governmental building. The Federal style had definite philosophical ties to the concept of Rome as the republic that the new American
- Federal Theatre Project, WPA (United States history)
WPA Federal Theatre Project, national theatre project sponsored and funded by the U.S. government as part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Founded in 1935, it was the first federally supported theatre in the United States. Its purpose was to create jobs for unemployed theatrical people
- federal theology (Protestant theology)
covenant theology, type of Reformed (Calvinist) theology emphasizing the notion of a covenant, or alliance, instituted by God, which humans are obligated to keep. This concept was developed in the latter part of the 16th century into the notions of the two covenants: the biblical covenant of works
- Federal Trade Commission (United States government agency)
The Federal Trade Commission is an independent agency of the U.S. federal government charged with preventing unfair or deceptive trade practices. Established by the Federal Trade Commission Act (1914), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulates advertising, marketing, and consumer credit
- Federal Trade Commission Act (United States [1914])
Federal Trade Commission Act (FTCA), federal legislation that was adopted in the United States in 1914 to create the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and to give the U.S. government a full complement of legal tools to use against anticompetitive, unfair, and deceptive practices in the marketplace.
- Federal Union (European history)
history of Europe: Ever closer union?: …private group that called itself Federal Union—in close touch with others at the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House)—began to campaign for unity in Europe as a last frail hope of preventing war. Some of the papers produced by its distinguished supporters, including work by Lord Lothian and Lionel…
- Federal University Gusau (university, Gusau, Nigeria)
Gusau: …women’s teacher-training college and the Federal University Gusau (2013). The town’s hospitals, health office, dispensary, and maternity clinic make it a chief medical centre for its part of the state. Gusau is located on the main railway between Kaura Namoda and Zaria and on a secondary highway between Talata Marfara…
- Federal University of Juiz de Fora (university, Brazil)
Juiz de Fora: …city is home to the Federal University of Juiz de Fora (1960), such museums as the Mariano Procopio (ecology), Rodoviário (bus), and Núcleo Histórico Ferroviário (railroad), and a sizable football (soccer) stadium. Juiz de Fora has a commercial airport and is on the main highway and railroad between Rio de…
- Federal Water Pollution Control Act (United States [1948])
Clean Water Act: …a major revision of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1948, which had proven ineffective. The CWA was itself amended in 1977 to regulate the discharge of untreated wastewater from municipalities, industries, and businesses into rivers, lakes, and coastal waters.
- Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 (United States [1972])
Clean Water Act (CWA), U.S. legislation enacted in 1972 to restore and maintain clean and healthy waters. The CWA was a response to increasing public concern for the environment and for the condition of the nation’s waters. It served as a major revision of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of
- Federal Writers’ Project, WPA (United States history)
WPA Federal Writers’ Project, a program established in the United States in 1935 by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) as part of the New Deal struggle against the Great Depression. It provided jobs for unemployed writers, editors, and research workers. Directed by Henry G. Alsberg, it
- federalism (political science)
federalism, mode of political organization that unites separate states or other polities within an overarching political system in a way that allows each to maintain its own integrity. Federal systems do this by requiring that basic policies be made and implemented through negotiation in some form,
- Federalist (Mexican history)
Mexico: The early republic: Opposed to them were the Federalists, who favoured limited central government, local militia, and nearly autonomous states; they tended to be anticlerical and opposed the continuance of colonial fueros, which gave special status to ecclesiastics and the military and exempted them from various civil obligations.
- Federalist 10 (American political essays)
Federalist papers, series of 85 essays on the proposed new Constitution of the United States and on the nature of republican government, published between 1787 and 1788 by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay in an effort to persuade New York state voters to support ratification.
- Federalist papers (American political essays)
Federalist papers, series of 85 essays on the proposed new Constitution of the United States and on the nature of republican government, published between 1787 and 1788 by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay in an effort to persuade New York state voters to support ratification.
- Federalist Party (historical political party, United States)
Federalist Party, early U.S. national political party that advocated a strong central government and held power from 1789 to 1801, during the rise of the country’s political party system. The term federalist was first used in 1787 to describe the supporters of the newly written Constitution, who
- Federalist Society (American organization)
Federalist Society, American organization of strongly conservative and libertarian lawyers, judges, politicians, government officials, legal scholars, and law students, founded as a student association in 1982 and originally including members from the law schools of the University of Chicago, Yale
- Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies (American organization)
Federalist Society, American organization of strongly conservative and libertarian lawyers, judges, politicians, government officials, legal scholars, and law students, founded as a student association in 1982 and originally including members from the law schools of the University of Chicago, Yale
- Federalist Wars (Venezuelan history)
Venezuela: The Monagas and the civil wars: The issues in these so-called Federalist Wars were, on the Liberal side, federalism, democracy, and social reform and, on the Conservative side, centralism and preservation of the political and social status quo. The conflicts were extremely bloody, and control of the central government changed hands several times. General Páez returned…
- Federalist, The (American political essays)
Federalist papers, series of 85 essays on the proposed new Constitution of the United States and on the nature of republican government, published between 1787 and 1788 by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay in an effort to persuade New York state voters to support ratification.
- Federalists’ Wall (wall, Paris, France)
Paris: The Buttes: Père-Lachaise Cemetery—the site of the Federalists’ Wall (Mur des Fédérés), against which the last of the fighters of the Commune of Paris were shot in 1871. The cemetery is both the largest park and the largest cemetery in Paris and is a major tourist attraction, renowned for its tombs of…
- Federally Administered Tribal Areas (administrative region, Pakistan)
Pakistan: …Khyber Pakhtunkhwa formerly designated as Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)—have become a haven for members of several militant Islamist groups, including the Taliban of neighbouring Afghanistan since the 2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. In various parts of the country, instances of ethnic, religious, and social conflict have flared up from…
- Federally Funded Research and Development Center (United States organization)
FFRDC, any of approximately 40 organizations that assist the U.S. government with scientific research and analysis, development and acquisition of new technologies, and systems engineering and integration. FFRDCs are sponsored by government agencies and administered by colleges and universities,
- Federalnaya Sluzhba Bezopastnosti (Russian government agency)
Federal Security Service (FSB), Russian internal security and counterintelligence service created in 1994 as one of the successor agencies of the Soviet-era KGB. It is responsible for counterintelligence, antiterrorism, and surveillance of the military. The FSB occupies the former headquarters of
- Federalnoye Kosmicheskoye Agentsvo (Russian government organization)
Roskosmos, Russian government organization founded in 1992 that is responsible for managing the Russian space program. Its headquarters are in Moscow. The head of Roskosmos is assisted by a board, a science and engineering council, and the heads of 11 departments. Roskomos is the descendant of the
- Federate (French partisan)
Federate, partisan of the Commune of Paris of 1871 (see Paris, Commune of). Many Communards called themselves Federates because they believed in a federal system for
- Federated Department Stores, Inc. (American company)
Fred Lazarus, Jr.: …billion holding company known as Federated Department Stores.
- Federated Mengjiang Commission (Chinese history)
Kalgan: History: In 1937 the Federated Mengjiang Commission was set up at Kalgan to supervise the economic affairs, banking, communications, and industry of Japanese-occupied Inner Mongolia. Colonization by Chinese settlers was checked as part of the pro-Mongol policies pursued by the Japanese. After World War II the area was occupied…
- Federated States of Micronesia (republic, Pacific Ocean)
Micronesia, country in the western Pacific Ocean. It is composed of more than 600 islands and islets in the Caroline Islands archipelago and is divided roughly along cultural and linguistic lines into the states of—from west to east—Yap, Chuuk, Pohnpei, and Kosrae. The capital is Palikir, on the
- Federati, I (Italian secret organization)
Italy: The Vienna settlement: …police penetrated another secret organization, I Federati (“The Confederates”), led by the Milanese nobleman Federico Confalonieri. The society favoured constitutional government, but its program was more moderate than that of the Carbonari though no less anti-Austrian. From December 1821 to January 1823 members of the conspiracy were unmasked in the…
- federation (politics)
federation, the government of a federal community. In such a model there are two levels of government, one dealing with the common and the other with the territorially diverse. Unlike a unitary government, in which power is centralized, in a federation there exists a necessary tension between the
- Féderátion Aéronautique Internationale (sports organization)
Féderátion Aéronautique Internationale (FAI), nongovernmental and nonprofit international organization that encourages and oversees the conduct of sporting aviation events throughout the world and certifies aviation world records. The FAI was founded by representatives from Belgium, France,
- Federation Council (Russian government)
Russia: Constitutional framework: It consists of the Federation Council (an upper house comprising appointed representatives from each of Russia’s administrative divisions) and the State Duma (a 450-member popularly elected lower house). The president’s nominee for chairman of the government is subject to approval by the State Duma; if it rejects a nominee…
- Federation Cup (women’s tennis)
Billie Jean King Cup, trophy representing the women’s amateur team-tennis championship of the world, inaugurated in 1963 by the International Lawn Tennis Federation in observance of its 50th anniversary. The first competition, an elimination tournament involving teams of three players from 16
- Fédération Cynologique Internationale (international organization)
Belgian Malinois: The Fédération Cynologique Internationale considered the four strains as varieties of one breed, the Belgian Shepherd (Chien de Berger Belge), which is placed in the Sheepdog and Cattledog Group. The breed was first brought to the United States in 1911, and the American Kennel Club first…
- Fédération de la Gauche Démocrate et Socialiste (French political alliance)
French Communist Party: …left-wing parties to form the Federation of the Democratic and Socialist Left (Fédération de la Gauche Démocrate et Socialiste). The alliance succeeded in keeping de Gaulle from an absolute majority in the first round of the 1965 election. In the first round of the June 1969 presidential election, the PCF…
- Fédération Dentaire Internationale
dentistry: Organizations: The Fédération Dentaire Internationale (International Dental Federation) was founded in 1900 and has met annually except in times of war. It has sponsored international dental congresses that are planned to meet every five years. Other international organizations include the Association Internationale pour la Recherche Dentaire (International Association for Dental…
- Fédération des Bourses du Travail (French trade union)
Federation of Labour Exchanges, federation of French workers’ organizations (bourses) established in 1892. The bourse was a combination of a labour exchange (dealing with job placement), a workers’ club and cultural centre, and a central labour union. The federation advocated direct action to bring
- Fédération des Églises Protestantes de la Suisse (religious organization)
Swiss Federation of Protestant Churches, confederation founded in 1920 to represent the interests of the churches in social issues, government liaison, and overseas mission and aid work. Membership is open to Christian churches that have adopted the principles of the Reformation. The Federation is
- Fédération Équestre Internationale (sports organization)
horse show: The Fédération Équestre Internationale and such member national organizations as the American Horse Shows Association regulate and promote the shows.
- Fédération Haltérophile Internationale (sports organization)
weightlifting: History: …the International Olympic Committee, the International Weightlifting Federation (Fédération Haltérophile Internationale; FHI) was formed to regularize events and supervise international competition. By 1928 the one- and two-hand lifts of earlier Games had given way to only two-hand lifts: the snatch, the clean and jerk, and the clean and press (described…
- Fédération Internationale d’Information et de Documentation (international organization)
International Federation for Information and Documentation, international library organization that was founded in 1895 as the Institut International de Bibliographie (IIB) to promote a unified and centralized approach to bibliographic classification. The IIB was founded by two Belgian lawyers,
- Fédération Internationale de Basketball Amateur (sports organization)
basketball: International competition: …game is governed by the Fédération Internationale de Basketball Amateur (FIBA). World championships began in 1950 for men and in 1953 for women. (The men’s tournament was renamed the FIBA Basketball World Cup in 2014.) Under international rules the court differs in that there is no frontcourt or backcourt, and…
- Fédération Internationale de Camping et de Caravanning
camping: History: …of Camping and Caravanning (Fédération Internationale de Camping et de Caravanning; FICC) was formed—the first international camping organization.
- Fédération Internationale de Football Association (sports organization)
FIFA, world governing body of association football (soccer), founded in Paris in 1904. FIFA is headquartered in Zürich, and its membership includes more than 200 national football associations. As association football’s governing authority, FIFA sets the rules of play, establishes standards for
- Fédération Internationale de Korfball (sports organization)
korfball: …Federation, which was established as Fédération Internationale de Korfball in 1933, increased its membership to more than 50 countries by the early 21st century.
- Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (sports organization)
24 Hours of Le Mans: …eight races that compose the International Automobile Federation (Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile; FIA) World Endurance Championship.