Federal territory
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A federal territory is an administrative division under the direct and usually exclusive jurisdiction of a federation's national government. A federal territory is a part of a federation, but not a part of any federated state. The states constitute the federation itself and share sovereignty with the federal government, while a territory does not have sovereign status and is constitutionally dependent on the federal government.
Federal territories in various federations
- Template:Flagicon AustraliaTemplate:Efn
- Template:Country data Ashmore and Cartier Islands (external)
- Template:Country data Australian Antarctic Territory (claimed)
- Template:Country data Australian Capital Territory (internal)
- Template:Country data Christmas Island (external)
- Template:Country data Cocos (Keeling) Islands (external)
- Template:Country data Coral Sea Islands (external)
- Template:Country data Heard Island and McDonald Islands (external)
- Template:Country data Jervis Bay Territory (internal)
- Template:Country data Norfolk Island (external)
- Template:Country data Northern Territory (internal)
- Template:Flagicon Canada
- Template:Flagicon IndiaTemplate:Efn
- Template:Flagicon Malaysia
- Template:Flagicon Nigeria
- Template:Flagicon Pakistan
- Template:Flagicon Russia
- Template:Flagicon United States
- Template:Country data American Samoa (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Flagdeco Bajo Nuevo Bank (claimed)
- Template:Country data Baker Island (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Guam (unincorporated organized)
- Template:Country data Howland Island (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Jarvis Island (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Johnston Atoll (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Kingman Reef (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Midway Atoll (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Navassa Island (unincorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Northern Mariana Islands (unincorporated organized)
- Template:Country data Palmyra Atoll (incorporated unorganized)
- Template:Country data Puerto Rico (unincorporated organized)
- Template:Flagdeco Serranilla Bank (claimed)
- Template:Country data U.S. Virgin Islands (unincorporated organized)
- Template:Country data Wake Island (unincorporated unorganized)
Historical federal territories
Brazil
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". In Brazil, although mentioned in the Federal Constitution, currently there are no federal territories. Brazil had three territories until the adoption of the 1988 Constitution: Fernando de Noronha (today a state district of Pernambuco), Amapá, and Roraima, now fully recognised states. From 1943 to 1982, Rondônia was also a federal territory (until 1956 under the name of Território do Guaporé).[1]
Canada
The Northwest Territories used to include a majority of what is now Canada, and was divided into districts for ease of administration from 1882 until 1999. One such district, Keewatin, was its own federal territory from 1876 until 1905.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Germany
The German Empire was a federation of monarchies and a few city-states. However, after the Franco-Prussian War, the newly created country annexed large parts of Alsace and Lorraine, two mostly German-speaking French territories which used to belong to the Holy Roman Empire. A large part of the local population was opposed to the transfer, meaning that granting statehood to the recently acquired territory would establish a state with a possible desire for secession which also was not used to German politics and German law. Incorporating the territory into Prussia, as happened to Schleswig-Holstein and other states during the German Unification Wars, was opposed by the South German states which already felt diminished by Prussia. Hence, an annexation to Bavaria and Baden was also discussed, yet met with opposition by the military which opined that the crucial border territory had to be governed from Berlin. As a compromise, Otto von Bismarck successfully proposed to incorporate Alsace-Lorraine as a territory directly governed by the Imperial (federal) government, leading to the creation of the Imperial Territory of Alsace-Lorraine (Reichsland Elsaß-Lothringen). The territorial status, common in the US, was unique within mainland Germany, as all constituent states were self-governing. In 1911 the Constitution of the German Empire was amended to treat Alsace-Lorraine as a state for certain matters, including its own government and votes in the Bundestag.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
France annexed the complete area after World War I. Since then, the German national government never had direct control over a German territory, with the exception of the Nazi government; however, Nazi Germany was - like East Germany - a centralized state where state governments were de facto abolished. The Federal Republic of Germany's Basic Law does not currently provide a legal way to create a federal territory, including a capital district, and describes the German national territory as being composed solely of states.
Mexico
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United States
In the United States, many of the states were territories or parts of territories before reaching statehood, e.g. Louisiana Territory, Mississippi Territory, Oregon Territory, Alaska Territory and Hawaii Territory. Before reaching statehood, these territories of the United States were formally usually of a kind which can be described as "organized incorporated territories", meaning that the government of the jurisdiction was formally organized in such a way as to comply with recognized federal standards for self-government, and that the jurisdiction was "organic" to the United States, that is, an irrevocably inseverable part of it rather than a protectorate, an area leased from and still pertaining formally to another nation, or a concession granted by another nation or group which conceivably could retain certain rights to it. "Incorporated" territories are a part of the United States, though not of any particular constituent state, and as such are not readily saleable or cessionable to other powers in the way that "unincorporated" territories are.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Notes
References
Template:Terms for types of country subdivisions
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