Administrative Subdivisions
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Administrative division, administrative unit,Article 3(1). country subdivision, administrative region, subnational entity, constituent state, as well as many similar terms, are generic names for geographical areas into which a particular, independent sovereign state (country) is divided. Such a unit usually has an administrative authority with the power to take administrative or policy decisions for its area. Usually, the countries have several levels of List of administrative divisions by country, administrative divisions. The common names for the principal (largest) administrative divisions are: Federated state, states (i.e. "subnational states", rather than sovereign states), provinces, States of Germany, lands, oblasts, governorates, Canton (administrative division), cantons, Prefecture, prefectures, counties, Region#Administrative_regions, regions, Department (administrative division), departments, and Emirate, emirates. These, in turn, are often subdivided into smaller administrative units known by names such as Circuit (administrative division), circuits, county, counties, comarca, ''comarcas'', raions, ''Județ, județe'', or District, districts, which are further subdivided into the municipality, municipalities, Commune (administrative division), communes or communities constituting the smallest units of subdivision (the Local government, local governments). The exact number of the levels of administrative divisions and their structure largely varies by country (and sometimes within a single country). Usually, the smaller the country is (by area or population), the fewer levels of administrative divisions it has. For example, Vatican City, the Vatican does not have any administrative subdivisions and Monaco has only one level, while such countries as France and Pakistan have five levels each. The United States is composed of states, possessions, Territory, territories, and a federal district, each with varying numbers of subdivisions. The principal administrative division of a country might be called the "''first-level'' (or ''first-order'') administrative division" or "first administrative level". Its next subdivision might be called "second-level administrative division" or "second administrative level" and so on. Administrative divisions are conceptually separate from dependent territory, dependent territories, with the former being an integral part of the state and the other being only under some lesser form of control. However, the term "administrative division" can include dependent territories as well as accepted administrative divisions (for example, in geographical databases). Communities united in a federation under a federal government are more specifically known as federated states. A federated state may be referred to not only as a ''state'', but also as a ''province'', a ''region'', a ''canton (country subdivision), canton'', a ''land'', a governorate, an ''oblast'', an emirate or a ''country''. Administrative units that are not federated or confederated but enjoy a greater degree of autonomy or self-government than other territories within the same country can be considered constituent states of that country. This relationship is by some authors called a federacy. An example is the autonomous republic of Karakalpakstan within Uzbekistan.International Covenant On Civil And Political Rights
p 5. United Nations Human Rights Committee. Accessed 2009-11-01.


Examples of administrative divisions


English terms

In many of the following terms originating from British cultural influence, areas of relatively low mean population density might bear a title of an entity one would expect to be either larger or smaller. There is no fixed rule, for "all politics is local" as is perhaps well demonstrated by their relative lack of systemic order. In the realm of self-government, any of these can and does occur along a stretch of road—which for the most part is passing through rural, unsettled countryside. Since the terms are administrative political divisions of the local regional government, their exact relationship and definitions are subject to home rule considerations, tradition, as well as sovereign state, state statute law and local governmental (administrative) definition and control. In British cultural legacy, some territorial entities began with fairly expansive counties which encompass an appreciably large area, but were divided over time into a number of smaller entities. Within those entities are the large and small cities or towns, which may or may not be the county seat. Some of the world's larger cities culturally, if not officially, span several counties, and those crossing state or provincial boundaries have much in common culturally as well, but are rarely incorporated within the same municipal government. Many sister cities share a water boundary, which quite often serves as a border of both cities and counties. For example, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Cambridge and Boston, Massachusetts appear to the casual traveler as one large city, while locally they each are quite culturally different and occupy different counties.


List

*Region, Area *Autonomous community *Banners of Inner Mongolia, Banner *Barangay *Barony (county division), Barony *Capital city *Canton (administrative division), Canton *County *Community (Wales), Community *Constituency *Crown Dependencies, Crown Dependency *Department (administrative division), Department *District *Division (political geography), Division *Duchy *Governorate * Legal entity *Hundred (county division), Hundred *Federal subjects *Federal monarchy, Kingdom *Local council (disambiguation), Local council *Municipality **Regional municipality, Regional **Regional county municipality, Regional county **Rural municipality, Rural *Oblast *Parish (administrative division), Parish *Prefecture *Principality *Province *Public body (Netherlands), Public body *Region (administrative), Region *Autonomous republic, Republic *Riding (division), Riding * State (polity), State *Special administrative region (disambiguation), Special administrative region *Territory *Theme (Byzantine district), Theme *Voivodeship


Urban or rural regions

General terms for these incorporated town, incorporated places include "municipality," "human settlement, settlement," "locality," and "populated place." *Borough, burgh or "boro" *City *Shire *Town *Township *Village


Indigenous

*Tribe *Indian reservation *Indian reserve *Band society, Band *Ranchería


Non-English terms

Due to variations in their use worldwide, consistency in the translation of terms from non-English to English is sometimes difficult to maintain.


See also

*GADM, a high-resolution database of country administrative areas. *ISO 3166-2, specifically ''Codes for the representation of names of countries and their subdivisions — Part 2''. *List of administrative division name changes *List of etymologies of country subdivision names *List of administrative divisions by country


References


External links


SALB
Second Administrative Level Boundaries (SALB) programme of the United Nations.
Statoids
an international convention with standardized two-letter-based multi-level summaries of administrative divisions worldwide (e.g

represents Adansi South District, Adansi South (AE) in the Greater Accra Region, Accra Home (AH) Regions of Ghana, region of Ghana (GH)). {{Authority control Administrative divisions, Types of administrative division, Types of geographical division