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Category: lawlaw

State form

1.

Topic : state form
Name : Ahmad Mokbel
Group:19LC1a

2.

Features of a Government
All types of governments have two features:
means of coercion and a means of collecting
revenue.
Means of coercion means that all governments
have to have some mechanism by which they get
individuals to go along with the rules. The United
States uses a series of means of coercion,
including threats of criminal or civil legal
punishment to compel desirable behaviors.

3.

In
authoritarian regimes, governments
might use threats of violence or
dismantling of individual liberties to
achieve compliance. All governments use
some form of tools like these to enforce
the rules.
Second,
all governments need revenue
because they require money for their
systems to function. Therefore, all
governments need some method of
collecting revenue. The usual way of
doing this is to use some combination of
taxation and fines.

4.

Types of goverment
Some
of the different types of
government include a direct democracy,
a representative democracy, socialism,
communism, a monarchy, an oligarchy,
and an autocracy. Help your students
understand the different forms of
government with these classroom
resources.

5.

Type of government in
lebanon
Lebanon
is a parliamentary democratic
republic within the overall framework of
confessionalism, a form of
consociationalism in which the highest
offices are proportionately reserved for
representatives from certain religious
communities.

6.

The constitution of Lebanon grants the people the
right to change their government. Article 7 of
Lebanon's Constitution also states that all
Lebanese are equal before the law, and are
"equally bound by public obligations and duties
without any distinction"[1] Meaning that all
Lebanese citizens- politicians included- are to be
held to the same standards of the law, and yet this
is not the case. However, from the mid-1970s until
the parliamentary elections in 1992, the Lebanese
Civil War (1975–1990) precluded the exercise of
political rights.

7.

Territorial structure
Territorial
structure means the spacial form
which is displayed on the globe by the
economic and social activities of human
beings. Under certain economic and
social conditions, territorial structure is also
the result of a spacial self-organization
within the elements and subsystems in the
territorial system.

8.

Features of territorial
In
the first section the concept of territorial
governance is presented. Its three main
components –cognitive, socio-political,
and organizational-technological– are
presented in the second section.

9.

Type of territory
types of territory include the following:
Capital territory
Dependent territory
Disputed territory, a geographic area claimed by two or
more rival governments. For example, the territory of
Kashmir is claimed by the governments of both India and
Pakistan; for each country involved in the dispute, the
whole territory is claimed as a part of the existing state.
Another example is the Republic of China (commonly
labeled "Taiwan"), whose sovereignty status is disputed by
and territory claimed by the People's Republic of China.
Federal territory
Maritime territory

10.

Occupied territory, a region that is under the military control of an
outside power that has not gained universal recognition from the
international community. Current examples are Crimea, occupied
by the Russian Federation; East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip, the
Golan Heights, and the West Bank, occupied by the State of Israel;
Western Sahara, partially occupied by the Kingdom of Morocco.
Other examples of occupied territory include the country of Kuwait
after it was briefly invaded by Iraq in 1990, Iraq after the American
invasion of 2003, Germany after World War II, and Kosovo after
1999.
Overseas territory
Unorganized territory, a region of land without a "normally"
constituted system of government. This does not mean that the
territory has no government at all or that it is an unclaimed territory.
In practice, such territories are always sparsely populated.

11.

Capital territory
A
capital territory or federal capital
territory is usually a specially designated
territory where a country's seat of
government is located. As such, in the
federal model of government, no one
state or territory takes pre-eminence
because the capital lies within its borders.
A capital territory can be one specific
form of federal district.

12.

Federal territory
A
federal territory is an area within the
direct and usually exclusive jurisdiction of
the central or national government within
a federation.

13.

The territorial administration of
Lebanon
The territorial administration of Lebanon is the
institutional and administrative organization of its
territory. Lebanon is divided into governorate
(mohafazah), district (caza) and municipalities.
These subdivisions may have an administrative
and electoral subject.
Mount Lebanon: Aaley Baabda Chouf Jbeil ...
North Lebanon: Batroun Bcharreh Koura Minie...
South Lebanon: Jezzine Saida (Sidon) Tyr (Sour)
Beqaa: Rachaiya West Beqaa Zahleh
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