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TOWNSHIP

(Redirected from Municapility)

A 'township' (or 'municipality') (in Ireland: townland) is a settlement which has been granted the status and powers of a unit of local government. Specific use of the term to describe political subdivisions has varied by country.
The term 'township' is a more common official term in English-speaking countries than 'municipality'. In a number of countries (including Canada and the United States), the terms township and municipality are both used, with differing legal senses. However such differences are specific to the given country and represent no actual difference in the general sense of the words. Such a distinction is possible only in English-speaking countries, since other languages have only one word for the concept (Canada must therefore use canton for French-speakers instead of township). .
The existence of two English words corresponding to a single word in other languages is a common phenomenon due to the mixed Germanic and Romance origins of English. The word township is Germanic in origin, derived from Old English ''tún'' meaning "manor", while the word municipality is ultimately derived from Latin.

Contents
Uses of the term
First-level entities
See also
References

Uses of the term


Township (or municipality) is generally associated with an urban area. However there are many exceptions to this rule, especially in the U.S.. In the Scottish Highlands the term describes a very small agricultural community, usually describing a local rural or semi-rural government within a county.
In most countries, a township is the smallest administrative subdivision to have its own democratically elected representative leadership.
The largest municipalities can be found in Canada and Greenland. Possibly the largest municipality in the world is Baie-James in northern Quebec, Canada, with a land area of 297,330 km² (114,800 sq. miles), which is larger than either Italy or the United Kingdom.

★ In Australia, municipalities are subdivisions of a state or territory. (See Local Government Areas in Australia). In Australia and New Zealand the designation of "township" traditionally refers to a small town: a place that in Britain might qualify as a village or a hamlet.

★ In Bolivia, a municipality (''municipio'') is part of a province, which is part of a departamento

★ In Bosnia and Herzegovina, a municipality (''općina'' or ''opÅ¡tina'') is


★ part of a canton (''kanton'')


★ a subdivision (grouped in regions)

★ In Brazil, a municipality (''município'') is part of a state (''estado'')

★ In Canada, two kinds of township occur in common use. See: Township (Canada)


★ In eastern Canada a township is one form of the subdivision of a county. In Canadian French, this is a ''canton''. Townships are referred to as "lots" in Prince Edward Island and merely form census subdivisions and are not administrative units. In Canada, a municipality is a city, town, township, county, or regional municipality which has been incorporated by statute by the legislatures of the provinces and territories. It is also a specific designation for certain municipalities in Quebec, Nova Scotia and Ontario. Certain areas of Saskatchewan and Manitoba are designated as rural municipalities, while equivalent areas in Alberta are designated as municipal districts and some in British Columbia are designated as 'district municipalities'.


★ In western Canada townships exist only for the purpose of land division by the Dominion Land Survey and do not form administrative units. These townships are six miles by six miles (36 square miles, or roughly 93.24 km²).

★ In Chile, a municipality (''municipalidad'') is a legal entity which administers one or more communes (''comuna'') which are the third-level division of the country. The first division are regions which a next divided into provinces (''provincia''). These provinces are next divided into ''comunas'' which are assigned to a municipality for administration. In most cases the municipality and the comuna have the same name, but the constitution permits a single municipality to be responsible for more than one commune.

★ In Colombia, a municipality (''municipio'') is a decentralized entity that group to form a department (''departamento''). Municipalities are formed by Corregimientos and Veredas.

★ In Croatia, a municipality (''općina'') is part of a county (''županija'')

★ In the Czech Republic, a municipality (''obec'') is part of a district (''okres'')

★ In Denmark, a municipality (''kommune'') is part of a region. Counties (''amter'') were abandoned in Denmark on January 1, 2007.

★ In the Dominican Republic a municipality (''municipio'') is a subdivision of a province (see municipalities of the Dominican Republic).

★ In England the term township referred to a subdivision used to administer a large parish.[1] This use became obsolete a long time ago. Recently, some councils, normally in the north of England, have revived the term (see Township (England)).

★ In Estonia, a municipality (''omavalitsus'') is the smallest division.

★ In Finland, a municipality (''kunta'') co-operates with municipalities nearby in a sub-region (''seutukunta'') and region (''maakunta''); a region belongs to a province (''lääni'') of the state. A municipality can freely call itself a "city" (''kaupunki'').

★ In France, a municipality (''commune'') is the lowest level of administrative division. A ''commune'' can be either a village, a small town, or a large city. The word ''municipalité'' is usually used to designate the administration running a large commune.

★ In Germany, a municipality (''Gemeinde'') is part of a district (''Kreis''). Larger entities of the same level are called towns (''Stadt''). In less populated regions, municipalities are often put together into collective municipalities (''Verbandsgemeinde'')

★ In Greece, a municipality is either an urban ''demoi'' or rural ''koinotetes'' which is then part of a prefecture (''nomos'') and then a larger region known as a periphery.

★ In Hungary, a municipality (''települési önkormányzat'') is part of a county (''megye'').

★ In Italy, a ''comune'' is part of a province (''provincia'') which is part of a region (''regione''). The term "municipality" is reserved for subdivisions of larger ''comuni'' (in particular, the comune of Rome).

★ In Japan, a municipality is the sphere of government within the prefectures, the sub-division of the state.

★ In Jersey, a municipality refers to the honorary officials elected to run each of the 12 Parishes into which it is subdivided.

★ In Kenya, a municipality is one of four types of local authorities. Nearly 50 major towns are given the municipality status.

★ In Lebanon, a municipality is part of a district (Arabic: ''Qadaa'') which is part of a Governorate (Region or Province, Arabic: ''Mouhafazah'').

★ In Lithuania, a municipality (''savivaldybÄ—'') is a part of a district (''apskritis'') and is subdivided into elderates (''seniÅ«nija'').

★ In Mexico, a municipality (''municipio'') is a subdivision of a state (estado) and a borough (''delegación'') is a subdivision of the Federal District (see municipalities of Mexico and Boroughs of the Mexican Federal District).

★ In the Netherlands, a municipality (''gemeente'') is part of a province (''provincie'').

★ Every part of mainland New Zealand is part of either a "city" (mostly urban) or a "district" (mostly rural). The term "municipality" has become rare in New Zealand since about 1979 and has no legal status.

★ In Nicaragua, a municipality (''municipio'') is subdivision of a department (''departamento'') or of one of the two Autonomous Regions, Región Autónoma del Atlántico Norte and Región Autónoma del Atlántico Sur.

★ In Norway, a municipality (''kommune'') is part of a county (''fylke'')

★ In the Philippines, a municipality (''bayan'') is part of a province (''lalawigan'') — except for the independent municipalities of Navotas, Pateros and San Juan in the National Capital Region — and is composed of barangays.

★ In Poland, a municipality (''gmina'') is a part of a county (''powiat'').

★ In Portugal, a municipality (''município'') is a directly elected local area authority generally consisting of a main city and surrounding villages, with wide-ranging local administration powers. It is also a subdivision of a district for central government purposes(''distritos'').

★ In Puerto Rico, a municipality (''municipio'') is a town or city with a popularly elected administration, including a mayor.

★ In Romania, a municipality (''municipiu'') is a town or a city ranked by law at this level. A commune is the lowest subdivision of a judeÅ£ .

★ In parts of north west Scotland (Highlands and Islands), a "township (Scotland)" is a crofting settlement.

★ In Serbia, a municipality (''opÅ¡tina'') is part of a county (''okrug'')

★ In Slovakia, a municipality (''obec'') is part of a district (''okres''). There are 2 891 municipalities in the state.

★ In South Africa, district municipalities and metropolitan municipalities are subdivisions of the provinces, and local municipalities are subdivisions of district municipalities.

★ In South Africa under Apartheid the term ''township'' came to mean a residential development which confined non-whites (Africans, "coloureds" and Indians) who lived near or worked in white-only communities. Soweto ("SOuth-WEst Townships") furnishes a well-known example. See Township (South Africa)

★ In Sweden, a municipality (''kommun'') is part of a county (''län'').

★ In Switzerland, a municipality (''commune/Gemeinde/comune'') is part of a canton (''canton/Kanton/cantone'') and defined by cantonal law.

★ In the United States, townships are often distinct from other types of municipalities. Two kinds of township occur. A state may have only one or both of these. In states that have both, the boundaries usually coincide. See Township (United States)


★ A survey township is a unit of land measure defined by the Public Land Survey System. These are generally referenced by a numbering system.


★ A civil township is a widely-used unit of local government. These are generally given names. These are usually abbreviated "Twp". However, even within the category of civil townships, there is great variety among how townships are used in different states. In New Jersey, for example, townships have the same legal standing as other types of municipalities.


★ The entities that have status as a municipality vary from state to state. Cities, towns, boroughs, or villages are common terms for municipalities. Townships, counties, and parishes are not generally considered to be municipalities, although there are exceptions. In some states, towns have a non-municipal status similar to townships.

★ In Venezuela, a municipality (''municipio'') is part of a state, as well as a subdivision of the Capital District (''estado'').

★ In Zimbabwe during colonial years of Rhodesia, the term township referred to a residential area reserved for non-white (black) citizens and no town was necessary. In modern Zimbabwe it refers to a residential area within close proximity of a rural growth point. See also Township (South Africa).

First-level entities



★ In the People's Republic of China, townships are found at the fourth level of the administrative hierarchy, together with ethnic townships, towns and subdistricts. See Township (China). A direct-controlled municipality (直辖市 in pinyin: zhíxiáshì) is a city with equal status to a province: Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, and Chongqing (see Municipality of China)

★ In the Republic of China on Taiwan, a municipality (直轄市 in Wade-Giles: chi-hsia-shih) is a city with equal status to a province: Taipei and Kaohsiung. (see Municipality of China)

★ In Macedonia, 84 municipalities (''opÅ¡tini''; singular: ''opÅ¡tina'') were established in 2004, reduced from 123 created in 1996.

★ In Portugal, a municipality (''município''/''concelho'') is the primary local administrative unit. Although it is a part of a district (''distrito'') for certain national administrative purposes, the municipality is not subordinate to the district and decentralization is doing away with the districts. A municipality contains one or more ''freguesias''.

★ In Puerto Rico, there are no first order administrative divisions, and the municipalities (''municipio'') serves as second-order, but first level, administrative divisions.

★ In Montenegro, a municipality (''opÅ¡tina'') is the topmost regional division

Municipalities of Libya, some very large.

★ In Slovenia, a municipality (''obÄina'') is the primary local administrative unit. There are 193 of them, 11 of which have a special "Urban" status with additional autonomy.

★ In Spain, a municipality (''municipio'') is the primary local administrative unit. It is a part of a province (''provincia'') for all national administrative purposes. A municipality contains one or more ''parroquias''. In the Galicia region, the municipalities are called concellos.

See also



Administrative division

Council of European Municipalities and Regions

Council-manager government

Croft (Scotland)

Large list of European Municipalities

Mayor

Mayor-council government

Muni

Municipal government

Municipal services

★ (with lists for countries)

Political science

Special-purpose district

Town

Urban-type settlement

References


1. Winchester, A. (2000). ''Discovering parish boundaries.'' Shire Publications:Princes Riseborough, UK. ISBN 0747804702. pages 21-29.


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