Administrative divisions of Romania

Administrative divisions of Romania

Romania's administration is relatively centralised and administrative subdivisions are therefore fairly simplified.

According to the Constitution of Romania, its territory is organized administratively into communes, towns and counties: [Constitution of Romania, [http://www.cdep.ro/pls/dic/site.page?den=act2_2&par1=1#t1c0s0a3 Title I, article 3] ]

* 41 counties and one municipality with a special status (Bucharest, the national capital)
* 211 cities and 103 municipalities (for urban areas), and 2827 communes (for rural areas).http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/pdf/ro/cap1.pdf] Municipality status is given to larger cities; municipalities have a more decentralised administration than cities.

Beyond the communal and city or municipal level, there are no further administrative subdivisions. However, communes are divided into villages (villages having no individual administration and hence not being an administrative division). There are 13,092 villages.

Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS)

For statistical purposes, Romania is also divided into:

*eight development regions (which are not administrative divisions "per se" but rather exist to co-ordinate regional development)
*41 counties and one municipality (Bucharest, the national capital)
*211 cities and 103 municipalities (for urban areas), and 2827 communes (for rural areas). Municipality status is given to larger cities; municipalities have a more decentralised administration than cities.

An exception to this structure is the Municipality of Bucharest, which is a secondary division (rather than a tertiary division like other municipalities) and is officially divided into six sectors, each sector having a local government and console.

In Romania, eight development regions (specific territorial entities without administrative status or legal personality) have been created by voluntary association. The development regions represent the framework for collecting specific statistical data, according to the European regulations issued by Eurostat for the Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS) II territorial level. According to the Emergency Government Ordinance No 75/2001 on the functioning of the National Institute for Statistics, eight Directorates General for regional statistics have been created and together with the 34 county directorates for statistics, aim at developing regional statistics.

The legal acts regarding Romania territorial division define the current territorial structure, similar to NUTS, as follows:
*NUTS I level: 4 macroregions ("macroregiune" in Romanian)
*NUTS II level: 8 development regions with an average population of 2.8 million inhabitants
*NUTS III level: 42 counties, reflecting Romania's administrative-territorial structure
*LAU I level: not used, as territorial units associations have not been identified yet;
*LAU II level: 265 cities and towns;
*2686 communes with 13,092 villages, reflecting the administrative-territorial structure of Romania.

According to the Romanian National Commission of Statistics (NCS), the Romanian territory is divided into eight regions, each consisting of six counties (administrative units) located in the same geographical area and having about the same population density. The eight regions are North-East, South-East, South, South-West, West, North-West, Center, and Bucharest. Bucharest is the only region that includes just one county, Ilfov.The criteria used by NCS for delimiting the regions is a combination of geographical location and homogeneity based on population density.

Notes

References

*Law 151/1998 regarding the regional development in Romania was published in “ _ro. Monitorul Oficial” on July 16 1998, being approved by the Romanian Parliament. [http://www.mie.ro/Negocieri/English/position_doc/CAP21-DP%20eng.doc. MIE Chapter 21]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Administrative divisions of Moldavia — Ţinut (pl. ţinuturi; sometimes translated in English as region[1], district[2] or municipality[3]) were the traditional subdivision of the Principality of Moldavia (1359 1859). Contents 1 Principality of Moldavia (1359 1859) …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Latvia — Administrative divisions of Latvia, (valid 1 July 2009). According to the Administrative territorial reform of Latvia, Latvia changed its administrative divisions from two level municipalities (towns, cities, towns countryside territories and… …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of the Kingdom of Hungary — The following lists show the administrative divisions of the lands belonging to the Hungarian crown (1000 1918) at selected points of time. The names are given in the main official language used in the Kingdom at the times in question. For… …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Ukraine — Ukraine This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Ukraine …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of the Peoples' Republic of Romania — The regions have represented the result of a sovietic inspired experiment regarding the administrative and territorial organisation of the People s Republic of Romania RPR (later Socialist Republic of Romania RSR), between 1950 and 1968. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Portugal — The border between the municipalities of Lisbon and Oeiras; shared also by the civil parishes of Santa Maria de Belém (Lisbon) and Algés (Oeiras) Administratively, Portugal is a unitary and decentralized State. Nonetheless, operationally, it is… …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Azerbaijan — Map of the administrative divisions of Azerbaijan. Note that the divisions of the Nakhchivan exclave are listed in the next section. 1. Absheron Rayon 2. Aghjabadi Rayon 3. Agdam Rayon 4. Agdash Rayon 5. Agstafa Rayon 6 …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Armenia — Subdivisions of Armenia Legend Map ref. Administrative division Provincial capital 1 Aragatsotn Ashtarak …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Moldova — Moldova This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Moldova …   Wikipedia

  • Administrative divisions of Abkhazia — In Soviet times, the Abkhazian ASSR was divided into 6 raions (districts) named after their respective capitals: Gagra, Gudauta, Sukhumi, Ochamchira, Gulripsh and Gali. The administrative divisions of the Republic of Abkhazia (international… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”