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State (administrative division)

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Many sovereign independent states are made up of a number of subnational entities also called states (or related terms). In some cases, such as the United States, the national government arose from a union of sovereign entities, which transferred some of their powers to the national government, while retaining the remainder of their sovereignty.[1] These are sometimes called federal states. In some countries, English terms such as province or canton refers to a comparable entity, while in others, the local name is commonly translated into English as states. In other cases, states are simply creations of the national government, or other administrative divisions.

In countries with federal constitutions, sovereignty is shared between a national federal government and regional states whose rights and/or powers cannot be over-ruled or vetoed by the national government. Although once a federal constitution is formed, the rules governing the relationship between national and regional powers become part of the country's municipal law and not international law.

Contents

[edit] Countries made up of states

[edit] Countries using the English term state

[edit] Countries using the Portuguese/Spanish term estado

[edit] Countries using the German term Land

  • Austria consists of 9 Bundesländer (or Länder)(eight states and the city-state Vienna), i.e."federal states" or "states". The rights of the Austrian Länder are regulated by the constitution and by state treaties. The second chamber of parliament ("Bundesrat"), which represents the member states, has an absolute veto in matters that would infringe the rights and powers of the member states. The Constitutional Court ("Verfassungsgerichtshof") decides in disputes between a state and the federation.
  • Germany consists of 16 Länder (ten Bundesländer(federal states), three Freistaaten (free states), one city-state (Berlin), on "Freie- und Hansestadt" (free and hanseatic city, Hamburg) and one freie Hansestadt (free hanseatic city, Bremen with the two cities Bremen and Bremenhaven) , also commonly referred to as Bundesländer and commonly translated into English as "federal states". Unlike Austria, Germany has a strong federal constitution, including some sovereignty for the Länder.

[edit] Other equivalent terms used in various countries

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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