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Patrimonial

 Inherited/Inheritable
 Patrimonialism is a form of governance in which all power flows directly from the ruler.
There is no distinction between the public and private domains.
 It seems to be attractive in circumstances where national identities are lacking and there
is no settled social contract or legitimate structure of authority in the country.
 Patrimonialism may have great social costs but it is a very effective way of governing in
a fissiparous nation.
 Patrimonialism seems to be encouraged by heterogeneity of identities.
 One is that patrimonialism heavily uses various forms of divide and rule and this strategy
appears to be much more feasible in societies have distinct ascriptive identities

Patrimonial Property

 According to Civil Code of the Philippines Article 421, all other property of the State,
which is not of the character stated in the preceding article, is patrimonial property.
 Essentially, patrimonial property is that owned by the state over which it has the same
rights as private individuals in relation to their own property.
 Thus, property of the state owned by it in its private or proprietary capacity.
 The state has the same rights over this kind of property as a private individual in relation
to his own private property
 In conclusion, its purpose is to optimize the development of the properties introduce
innovative improvements that are relevant and suitable and innovative improvements that
are relevant and suitable as well as generate revenue that is advantageous to the
government.

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