INSULAR AREA


An 'insular area' is United States territory that is neither a part of one of the fifty states nor a part of the District of Columbia, the nation's federal district.
Because those insular areas that are inhabited are unincorporated territories, their native-born inhabitants are not constitutionally entitled to United States citizenship under the Citizenship Clause. However, Congress has extended citizenship rights to all inhabited territories with the exception of American Samoa, and these citizens may vote and run for office in any U.S. jurisdiction in which they are resident. Residents of American Samoa are U.S. nationals, but not U.S. citizens; they are free to move around and seek employment within the whole United States without immigration restrictions, but cannot vote or hold office outside of American Samoa.
Residents of insular areas do not pay U.S. federal taxes, but most pay taxes to the territorial governments at the same rates as U.S. federal income taxes. Insular areas do not choose electors in U.S. presidential elections or elect voting members of the U.S. Congress. Goods manufactured in insular areas of the United States can be labeled "Made in USA."
The U.S. State Department uses the term ''insular area'' to refer not only to these territories under the sovereignty of the United States, but also those independent nations that have signed a Compact of Free Association with the United States. While these nations participate in many otherwise domestic programs, they are legally distinct from the United States and their inhabitants are not United States citizens or nationals.
Location of the insular areas


Contents
List and status of insular areas
Incorporated (integral part of United States)
Inhabited
Uninhabited
Unincorporated (United States' possessions)
Inhabited
Uninhabited
Freely-associated states
Disputed
Former Insular areas
See also
External links

List and status of insular areas


Several islands in the Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea are considered insular areas of the United States.
Incorporated (integral part of United States)

Inhabited


★ none
Uninhabited


Palmyra Atoll (uninhabited, owned by The Nature Conservancy but administered by the Office of Insular Affairs; part of the United States Minor Outlying Islands)
Unincorporated (United States' possessions)

Inhabited


American Samoa (officially unorganized, although self-governing under authority of the U.S. Department of the Interior)

Guam (organized under Organic Act of 1950)

Northern Mariana Islands (commonwealth, organized under 1977 Covenant)

Puerto Rico (territory with commonwealth status, organized under terms of Puerto Rico-Federal Relations Act) Originally was granted to U.S. through the Treaty of Paris in 1898

U.S. Virgin Islands (organized under Revised Organic Act of 1954)
Uninhabited

Along with Palmyra Atoll, these form the United States Minor Outlying Islands:

Baker Island

Howland Island

Jarvis Island

Johnston Atoll

Kingman Reef

Midway Islands (administered as the Midway Atoll National Monument)

Navassa Island

Wake Island
From July 18, 1947 until October 1, 1994, the U.S. administered the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, but more recently entered into a new political relationship with all four political units (one of which is the Northern Mariana Islands listed above, the others being the three freely-associated states noted below).
Freely-associated states

The freely-associated states are the three sovereign states with which the United States has entered into a Compact of Free Association. They have not been within U.S. jurisdiction since they became sovereign; however, many considered them to be dependencies of the United States until each was admitted to the United Nations in the 1990s.

Republic of the Marshall Islands

Federated States of Micronesia

Republic of Palau
Disputed


Navassa Island ''(with Haiti)''

Wake Island ''(with Marshall Islands)''

Serranilla Bank ''(with Colombia)''

Bajo Nuevo Bank ''(with Jamaica)''
Former Insular areas


Philippines, granted to U.S. through the Treaty of Paris in 1898, achieved independence on July 4th, 1946.

Cuba, granted to U.S. through the Treaty of Paris in 1898, gained formal independence on May 20, 1902.

See also



Commonwealth (United States insular area)

Incorporated territory

Organized territory

Unorganized territory

Compact of Free Association

Freely associated states

Guano Islands Act

Guantanamo Bay

Insular Cases

Political divisions of the United States

United States Minor Outlying Islands

United States territorial acquisitions

United States territory

External links



Office of Insular Affairs

Department of the Interior Definitions of Insular Area Political Types

Rubin, Richard, "The Lost Islands", ''The Atlantic Monthly'', February 2001

Chapter 7: Puerto Rico and the Outlying Areas, U.S. Census Bureau, Geographic Areas Reference Manual (PDF)

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