Characteristics of A State
What is a Nation/State? A particular geographic boundary within which an organized government makes and enforces law WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF A HIGHER AUTHORITY
NO ONE TO ANSWER TO GOVERNMENT LOWER GOVERNMENT STATE, LOCAL ETC.
TERRITORY Boundaries must be recognized by other nations
POPULATION Yes, they must have people. 1 China 1,339,190,000 2 India 1,184,639,000 3 USA 309,975,000 4 Indonesia 234,181,400 188 Monaco 33,000 192 Nauru10,000 193 Vatican City800
SOVEREIGNTY How does a nation get it? By Declaring It THE RIGHT, POWER, AND AUTHORITY TO GOVERN ITS OWN PEOPLE How does a nation get it? By Declaring It
GOVERNMENT UNITARY GOVERNMENT main powers to the central government. State, provincial, and local governments are all created by the central government. The non-central governments have only the powers that are appointed by the central government.
EXAMPLES France, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom,
GOVERNMENT FEDERAL GOVERNMENT the federal system develops when a number of states or provinces federate, or form a union. the powers of the governments are jointly shared between the central government and the more local or regional governments
EXAMPLES The United States and Canada have federal systems. Other countries that use the federal plan include Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Germany, India, Mexico, and Switzerland.
Government Confederation A union of several member states with a common purpose Often has a central government with little or no power Member states retain most power
Examples Russia European Union