Constituent country
Constituent country is a term sometimes used in contexts in which a country makes up a part of a larger political entity, such as a sovereign state. The term constituent country does not have any defined legal meaning, and is used simply to refer to a country which is a constituent part of something else.
Contents
In unitary states
Denmark
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The Danish Realm consists of three constituent parts, each part often referred to as a country:
Country | Capital | Sovereign state |
---|---|---|
Denmark | Copenhagen | Kingdom of Denmark |
Faroe Islands[1] | Tórshavn | |
Greenland[2] | Nuuk |
However, this terminology is not consistent. The Faroes are also referred to as a "self-governing territory" or similar by (e.g.) the Prime Minister of the Faroe Islands[3] and the Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[4] In the Danish/Faroese act of 2005 (Act on the Faroese authorities acquisition of affairs and fields / (Danish) Lov om de færøske myndigheders overtagelse af sager og sagsområder) the Faroese government is referred to as an equal partner to the Danish government.[5][6]
France
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In 2004, the French overseas collectivity of French Polynesia was legally designated as a pays d'outre-mer au sein de la République,[7] translated as an "overseas country inside the Republic".[8] The Constitutional Council of France ruled that this was merely a change of appellation and did not represent a constitutional change in legal status.[9]
Netherlands
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Since 10 October 2010, the Kingdom of the Netherlands consists of four countries:[10]
Country | Capital | Sovereign state |
---|---|---|
Netherlands including the Caribbean Netherlands (BES islands) | Amsterdam | Kingdom of the Netherlands |
Aruba | Oranjestad | |
Curaçao | Willemstad | |
Sint Maarten | Philipsburg |
Each is expressly designated as a land in Dutch law by the Charter for the Kingdom of the Netherlands.[11] Unlike the German Länder and the Austrian Bundesländer, landen is consistently translated as "countries" by the Dutch government.[12][13][14]
New Zealand
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The Realm of New Zealand consists of three parts usually referred to as countries:
Country | Capital | Sovereign state |
---|---|---|
New Zealand | Wellington | Realm of New Zealand |
Cook Islands[15][16] | Avarua | |
Niue[17] | Alofi |
However, the Constitutions of the Cook Islands[18] and of Niue[19] do not describe either as a country, nor do the New Zealand Acts which brought those constitutions into force.[20][21]
United Arab Emirates
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Emirate | Capital | Sovereign state |
---|---|---|
Abu Dhabi | Abu Dhabi | United Arab Emirates |
Ajman | Ajman | |
Dubai | Dubai | |
23x15px Fujairah | Fujairah | |
Ras al-Khaimah | Ras al-Khaimah | |
Sharjah | Sharjah | |
Umm al-Quwain | Umm al-Quwain |
United Kingdom
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The United Kingdom is generally described as comprising four countries:[22]
Country | Capital | Sovereign state |
---|---|---|
England | London | United Kingdom |
Scotland | Edinburgh | |
Wales | Cardiff | |
Northern Ireland | Belfast |
The United Kingdom itself is a unitary state and not four countries in personal union but came about by the union of four countries. Wales was incorporated into the kingdom of England in 1542, the kingdoms of England and Scotland united in 1707, and the kingdom of Ireland united with them in 1801. Northern Ireland was created when Ireland was partitioned in 1921. Northern Ireland remained in the United Kingdom, whereas the rest (now the Republic of Ireland) left.
Although the term country is usually applied uncontroversially to England, Scotland and Wales, Northern Ireland is often described using other terms, such as "region" or "province".[23][24][25] For example, ISO 3166-2:GB defines the UK as being made up of three countries (England, Scotland, Wales) and one province (Northern Ireland).[26]
Northern Ireland had a devolved parliament from 1921–72. Devolution was restored to Northern Ireland in 1999 following the Good Friday Agreement and referenda in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland in 1998. After referenda in 1997, new devolved governments were created in Scotland and Wales. England remains solely under the Parliament of the United Kingdom in London.
At sporting events such as rugby union, an alternative title, Home Nations, is used, which in these contexts sometimes includes Ireland as a whole.
China
China does not have any specified constituencies, but it contains the Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau, both of which have separate governments from the national government. This political arrangement is sometimes called "one country, two systems".
In federal states
Soviet Union
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According to its constitution the Soviet Union was a union of freely associated Soviet Socialist Republics; in reality, for most of its lifespan the USSR was a strongly centralized state.
Map of the Union Republics from 1956–1991 |
|||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Soviet socialist republic |
member since |
population (1989) |
pop./ USSR pop. (%) |
area (km²) (1991) |
area/ USSR area (%) |
capital |
independent state |
No. |
|||||||
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic | 1922 | 147,386,000 | 51.40 | 17,075,400 | 76.62 | Moscow | Russia | 1 | |||||||
Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1922 | 51,706,746 | 18.03 | 603,700 | 2.71 | Kiev (Kharkov before 1934) |
Ukraine | 2 | |||||||
Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic | 1924 | 19,906,000 | 6.94 | 447,400 | 2.01 | Tashkent (Samarkand before 1930) |
Uzbekistan | 4 | |||||||
Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic | 1936 | 16,711,900 | 5.83 | 2,727,300 | 12.24 | Astana | Kazakhstan | 5 | |||||||
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1922 | 10,151,806 | 3.54 | 207,600 | 0.93 | Minsk | Belarus | 3 | |||||||
Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic | 1936 | 7,037,900 | 2.45 | 86,600 | 0.39 | Baku | Azerbaijan | 7 | |||||||
Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1936 | 5,400,841 | 1.88 | 69,700 | 0.31 | Tbilisi | Georgia | 6 | |||||||
Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic | 1929 | 5,112,000 | 1.78 | 143,100 | 0.64 | Dushanbe | Tajikistan | 12 | |||||||
Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1940 | 4,337,600 | 1.51 | 33,843 | 0.15 | Kishinev | Moldova | 9 | |||||||
Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic | 1936 | 4,257,800 | 1.48 | 198,500 | 0.89 | Bishkek | Kyrgyzstan | 11 | |||||||
Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1940 | 3,689,779 | 1.29 | 65,200 | 0.29 | Vilnius | Lithuania | 8 | |||||||
Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic | 1924 | 3,522,700 | 1.23 | 488,100 | 2.19 | Ashkhabad | Turkmenistan | 14 | |||||||
Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1936 | 3,287,700 | 1.15 | 29,800 | 0.13 | Yerevan | Armenia | 13 | |||||||
Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1940 | 2,666,567 | 0.93 | 64,589 | 0.29 | Riga | Latvia | 10 | |||||||
Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic | 1940 | 1,565,662 | 0.55 | 45,226 | 0.20 | Tallinn | Estonia | 15 |
Yugoslavia
The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was divided into six Constituent Socialist Republics, along with two self autonomous Provinces within Serbia.
Country | Capital | Classification | Modern Subject |
---|---|---|---|
Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina | Sarajevo | Socialist Republic | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Socialist Republic of Croatia | Zagreb | Republic of Croatia | |
Socialist Republic of Montenegro | Podgorica | Montenegro | |
Socialist Republic of Macedonia | Skopje | Republic of Macedonia | |
Socialist Republic of Serbia | Belgrade | Republic of Serbia | |
Socialist Republic of Slovenia | Ljubljana | Republic of Slovenia | |
Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo | Pristina | Socialist Autonomous Province | Republic of Kosovo (Independence Disputed) |
Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina | Novi Sad | Autonomous Province of Vojvodina (Within Serbia) |
St Kitts and Nevis
The island of Nevis has a constitutionally guaranteed right to secede from the Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis and thereby become a sovereign country. This is stipulated in section 113 of the Kittian/Nevisian Constitution.[30] An independence referendum was held in Nevis on 10 August 1998. With 62% support amongst Nevisian voters, it fell slightly short of the constitutionally required two-thirds majority support necessary.[31] In view of the constitutional position, both St. Kitts and Nevis could be regarded as constituent countries of the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis.
See also
- Associated state
- Constituent state
- Electoral district or constituency
- Federacy
- Political union
- Regional state
References
- ↑ The West Nordic Council. website. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
- ↑ Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Factsheet Denmark: Greenland.
- ↑ Prime Minister of the Faroe Islands. "About the Faroe Islands". Retrieved 8 March 2011
- ↑ Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Factsheet Denmark – the Faroes.
- ↑ retsinformation.dk Lov om de færøske myndigheders overtagelse af sager og sagsområder
- ↑ Denne lov bygger på en overenskomst mellem Færøernes landsstyre og den danske regering som ligeværdige parter. (Faroese)]
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- ↑ Cook Islands Government. "The Cook Islands Government Online". Retrieved 8 March 2011.
- ↑ Australian Government. "AusAid". Retrieved 8 March 2008.
- ↑ Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. "Niue". Retrieved 8 March 2011.
- ↑ "Constitution of the Cook Islands".
- ↑ "Constitution of Niue".
- ↑ "New Zealand legislation – Cook Islands".
- ↑ "New Zealand legislation – Niue".
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- ↑ Constitution of the Federation of Saint Christopher (St. Kitts) and Nevis
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- Articles with Faroese-language external links
- Articles with Danish-language external links
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Arabic-language text
- Use dmy dates from February 2011
- British Isles
- Constitutional state types
- Geography of the United Kingdom
- Political terms in the United Kingdom
- Politics of England
- Politics of Northern Ireland
- Politics of Scotland
- Politics of Wales
- Types of country subdivisions
- Types of subdivision in the United Kingdom