'Federal districts' are subdivisions of a
federal system of government. Often, these districts are not one of the countries' component
subdivisions, and should not be confused with them, but are rather separate entities under the direct control of the federal government.
United States
The
seat of the U.S. federal government in
Washington is a federal district known as the
District of Columbia. In addition, the
U.S. government has several other kinds of "federal districts" which are not specifically related to a capital city:
★ The
federal court system divides each state, plus the District of Columbia and
Puerto Rico, into one or more
federal judicial districts; a
United States District Court and a
United States Bankruptcy Court are located in each. There are also
federal judicial circuits, each consisting of a group of states (except for the
District of Columbia Circuit which consists only of the federal district); Puerto Rico and the
United States territorial courts are also assigned to circuits. Each circuit has a
United States court of appeals.
★ The U.S.
central bank, the
Federal Reserve, consists of twelve banks located around the country; each of these banks serves a Federal Reserve district.
Malaysia
In
Malaysia, the term
Federal Territory (Malay: ''Wilayah Persekutuan)'' is used for the three territories governed directly by the federal government, namely
Kuala Lumpur (national capital),
Putrajaya (federal government administrative centre) and
Labuan Island (international offshore financial centre).
Latin America
The term ''Distrito Federal'', meaning "Federal District" in both the
Spanish and
Portuguese languages, is used to refer to:
★ Argentine Federal District, today the
Autonomous city of
Buenos Aires (Argentina is not a federal state).
★
Brazilian Federal District
★
Mexican Federal District
★
Venezuelan Capital District
Other uses
There are seven
Federal districts of Russia, which function as an additional administrative layer between other subdivisions and the
Russian Federation as a whole. But these have nothing to do with the territory surrounding a capital city.