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  1. What government has one central government and no powerful subdivisions? Unitary. In what system does the central government act directly on the citizens by making laws and policies for everyone?

  2. What are the pros and cons? Needless to say, this depends on who you ask. The most common argument for unitary authorities is that they reduce duplication and increase efficiency because they ...

  3. A unitary system is where power is held primarily by the central government without much power given to local governments, like in France and China. In a unitary system, the central government controls nearly all of the state matters. Local governments are usually just an extension of the central government without much power of their own.

  4. Sep 10, 2016 · 1. Weak Central Government. The central government becomes a weak institution as the authority comes from the states. In fact, the member states should have the majority of the legislative authority. Thus, it leaves the center to be helpless in making or enforcing laws. 2. Financial Power.

  5. Oct 12, 2022 · Thus, the ‘classic’ European patent system provides a higher degree of flexibility than the unitary patent. As an added benefit, the flexibility of national filing also can reduce future renewal costs. Fixed geographic scope: As noted above, the unitary patent system has not yet been ratified by all signatories.

  6. Oct 13, 2023 · Communism is a political and economic ideology that positions itself in opposition to liberal democracy and capitalism, advocating instead a classless system in which the means of production are ...

  7. This Essay offers a brief and highly speculative political, intellec-tual, and legal history of the theory of the unitary executive in the late twentieth century.1 I suggest that that theory developed in three stages, which I label the weak, the strong, and the super-strong versions, and confronted one alternative that superficially resembled ...

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