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Unitary Government, POWER - Coggle Diagram
Unitary Government
Disadvantage - Laws or policies may favor one region more than the others. Cannot meet the needs of everyone :red_cross:
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Disadvantage - slow government response. i.e. in case of emergency, there are no State troops to defend so instead they must wait until national authority permits the mobilization of national troops into the destination State.
Advantage- funds (tax) will go straight to the federal government and not to individual state so there is no variation in taxation.
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The BLUE :silhouette: parts of the picture represent parts of the world with a Unitary government. The GREEN portions :recycle: of the picture represent parts of the world WITHOUT one.
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Japan
Unitary Government - the central government has the power to control its 47 regions, which are called prefectures.
This makes national laws that the regional governments must carry out. It also provides funds without which the prefectures could not operate
The prefectures themselves (along with Japan's cities . towns , and villages, have a significant amount of control over LOCAL AFFAIRS.
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United Kingdom
Regional countries such as England, Scotland, and Wales and Northern Ireland have have their own rights as U.K has decentralized to some extent.
The U.K. is an example of a nation-state in which powers delegated to the four other countries are much more lenient as the four countries are given more autonomy.
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POWER
Highly centralized, divided in a federal system, and decentralized in a confederal system.
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