Revision as of 17:42, 10 May 2013 editArredondo ales (talk | contribs)88 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:26, 31 October 2013 edit undoSteinsplitter (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, File movers, Rollbackers3,485 editsm File:Flag of pando.svg → File:Flag of Pando.svg renamed on commons but usage not replacedNext edit → | ||
Line 83: | Line 83: | ||
| style="background:#efefef;" align=left|] (32,217) | | style="background:#efefef;" align=left|] (32,217) | ||
| style="background:#efefef;" align=center|] | | style="background:#efefef;" align=center|] | ||
| style="background:#efefef;" align=center|] | | style="background:#efefef;" align=center|] | ||
|- | |- | ||
|align=left|] | |align=left|] |
Revision as of 16:26, 31 October 2013
Bolivia is divided into nine departments (Template:Lang-es). Each of the departments is subdivided into provinces (provincias), which are further subdivided into municipalities (municipios).
Departments are governed by the elected governors (until 2010, prefects; and until 2005, appointed by the President) and by independently elected Departmental Legislative Assemblies (until 2010; Departmental Councils).
Bolivia's nine departments received greater autonomy under the Administrative Decentralization law of 1995. Departmental autonomy further increased with the first popular elections for departmental governors, known as prefects, on 18 December 2005. Four departments (Santa Cruz, Beni, Pando and Tarija) voted for greater autonomy in 2005, and without constitutional authorization, passed statutes of autonomy in 2008. The remaining five departments approved departmental autonomy in the general elections of 2009.
Department statistics
Departments of Bolivia | |||||||
Department | Abbreviation | Population | Area (km²) | Density | Capital (Pop.) | Map | Flag |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total Bolivia | BOL | 10,027,644 | 1,098,581 | 9.1 | Sucre (Constitutional) Nuestra Señora de La Paz (Seat of Government) |
||
Beni | BNI | 430,049 | 213,564 | 1.9 | Trinidad (86,385) | ||
Chuquisaca | CHQ | 631,062 | 51,524 | 11.9 | Sucre (280,259) | ||
Cochabamba | CBB | 1,786,040 | 55,631 | 22.7 | Cochabamba (586,813) | ||
La Paz | LPZ | 2,756,989 | 133,985 | 19.9 | Nuestra Señora de La Paz (835,000) | ||
Oruro | ORU | 444,093 | 53,558 | 8.2 | Ciudad de Oruro (281,700) | ||
Pando | PND | 75,335 | 63,827 | 1.1 | Cobija (32,217) | ||
Potosí | PSI | 780,392 | 118,218 | 6.5 | Ciudad de Potosí (149,246) | ||
Santa Cruz | SCZ | 2,626,697 | 370,621 | 7.1 | Santa Cruz de la Sierra (1,638,343) | ||
Tarija | TJA | 496,988 | 37,623 | 12.5 | Ciudad de Tarija (170,906) | ||
Source: Demographic Projections 2008, INE. Population density calculated based on 2006 population projections. |
See also
- ISO 3166-2:BO, the ISO codes for the departments of Bolivia.
- Bolivian autonomy referendums, 2008
References
- Dueling rallies spotlight Bolivian split, LA Times, 2007-12-16.
External links
Departments of Bolivia | ||
---|---|---|
First-level administrative divisions of South American countries | |
---|---|
Table of administrative country subdivisions by country |