Succession

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Succession is the act or process of following in order or sequence. (It is not to be confused with secession, the act of withdrawing from an organization, union, or political entity.)

Part of a series on:
Orders of Succession
Monarchies

Bahrain
Belgium
Bhutan
Brunei
Cambodia
Denmark
Japan
Jordan
Kuwait
Lesotho
Liechtenstein
Luxembourg
Malaysia
Monaco
Morocco
Nepal
Netherlands
Norway
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Spain
Swaziland
Sweden
Thailand
Tonga
United Kingdom

see also:
Former Monarchies
Presidencies
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Contents

[edit] Succession in office

Main article: Order of succession

In politics, succession is the ascension to power by one politician or monarch after another, usually in a clearly defined order. See, for example:

[edit] Legal succession: Inheritance or heirship

Succession of property at law covers the two distinct concepts of inheritance (a gift made by will or other testamentary document on death) and heirship, which applies where property passed to one or more dependants according to a formula set out in law, religion, custom or under the terms of a trust. Succession may also apply to artificial persons, usually through corporate mergers or reorganizations.

[edit] Musical succession

In music or musical set theory, a succession is a series of any musical parameters including pitches, pitch classes, or simultaneities (see simultaneity succession). Succession may be thought of as a more general term for any possible progression, as in chord progression or harmonic progression, though not all simultaneity successions are harmonic progressions.

[edit] Ecological succession

Main article: Ecological succession

Ecological succession refers to the often predictable series of changes in an ecological community over time after a disturbance, such as a fire, hurricane, or a small-scale disturbance such as a tree explosion.

[edit] Urban succession

Drawing from the concept of ecological succession, urban geographers have noted that many urban areas can be described with a similar model of "urban succession." For example, as neighbourhoods mature, old houses get replaced by condominiums and town houses, which in turn eventual develop into higher density housing. Nevertheless, there are inherent problems with this model as many exceptions exist.