Examples of patrimonial government in the following topics:
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- Patrimonial government is related to this model, but is slightly different.
- Military force is an important instrument of patrimonial rule.
- Patrimonial dominance has often prevailed in the Orient.
- Second, in a patrimonial government, officials are personally dependent on the patriarch.
- Compare patrimonial government with feudalism within the context of traditional authority
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- One of his hypotheses was that regions with strong traditions of civic engagement would have more responsive, more democratic, and more efficient governments, regardless of the institutional form that government took.
- To test this hypothesis, he compared twenty different regional Italian governments.
- In southern Italy, politics were traditionally patrimonial, whereas in northern Italy, politics were traditionally more open and citizens were more engaged.
- To test this hypothesis, he compared twenty different regional Italian governments.
- In southern Italy, politics were traditionally patrimonial, whereas in northern Italy, politics were traditionally more open and citizens were more engaged.
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- These rules are enforced by a government that monopolizes their enactment, while holding the legitimate use of physical force.
- Weber wrote that the modern state based on rational-legal authority emerged from the patrimonial and feudal struggle for power uniquely in Western civilization.
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- Cultural items include human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony.
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- There are two types of government-initiated monopoly: a government monopoly and a government-granted monopoly.
- There are instances in which the government initiates monopolies, creating a government-granted monopoly or a government monopoly.
- Government-granted monopolies often closely resemble government monopolies in many respects, but the two are distinguished by the decision-making structure of the monopolist.
- In a government-granted monopoly, the government gives a private individual or a firm the right to be a sole provider of a good or service.
- In a government monopoly, an agency under the direct authority of the government itself holds the monopoly, and the monopoly is sustained by the enforcement of laws and regulations that ban competition or reserve exclusive control over factors of production to the government.
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- These territories included his patrimony in the Netherlands, where Protestantism had taken deep root.
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- Powers of local governments are defined by state rather than federal law, and states have adopted a variety of systems of local government.
- The US Census Bureau conducts the Census of Governments every five years to compile statistics on government organization, public employment, and government finances.
- The categories of local government established in this Census of Governments is a convenient basis for understanding local government: county governments, town or township governments, municipal governments and special-purpose local governments.
- County governments are organized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes.
- Town or township governments are organized local governments authorized in the state constitutions and statutes of states, established to provide general government for a defined area, generally based on the geographic subdivision of a county.
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- Government interest groups are a unique type of interest group that represents the interests of government to other governments.
- Government interest groups are a unique form of interest groups that represent the interests of government to other governments.
- Since then local governments have continued their efforts.
- FERA was part of the New Deal federal funding to state and local governments.
- Give examples of government interest groups and their influence on policy
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