CIVIL DIVISION OF THE WORLD PART V. WESTERN HEMISPHERE APRIL 1958

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CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1
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April 1, 1958
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pproved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY N? CIVIL DIVISIONS OF THE WORLD Part V. Western Hemisphere April 1958 CIA/RR-GR-185 ~wj NO CHANCE 4N CLASS C-LAM513. CHANGED TO: A 'tH: tifj 70- CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLN proved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY GEOGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE REPORT CIVIL DIVISIONS OF THE WORLD Part V. Western Hemisphere April 1958 CIA/RR-GR-185 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RD.P79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 CONTENTS A. North America Alaska Greenland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . St. Pierre and Miquelon 'United States B. Middle.America (Mainland) Mexico .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 12 Guatemala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 British Honduras . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . . . . . . . . 15 Honduras . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 El Salvador . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . 17 Nicaragua . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Costa Rica . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 19 Panama Panama Canal Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 C. Middle America(Insular) Antigua . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . 23 Barbados . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Dominica . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 25 Grenada . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Jamaica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . 27 Dependencies of Jamaica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . 28 Montserrat . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 St. Lucia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Trinidad and Tobago . 32 ......... 33 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Page Caribbean Islands Claimed by the United States and Colombia . . . . . . . .34 Serranilla Bank . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Swan Islands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Cuba . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Bahamas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Navassa Island . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Haiti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Dominican Republic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Puerto .Rico . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Virgin Islands of the United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 British Virgin Islands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Netherlands Antilles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _. . 1i5 Guadeloupe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Martinique . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 D. South America ~+9 Venezuela 52 .......... 53 French Guiana . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . 54 Brazil . . . . . . . . . . Ecuador . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Peru . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Bolivia . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Paraguay .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Chile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Argentina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Uruguay . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 South Atlantic Islands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 - -ii - Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 CIVIL DIVISIONS OF THE WORLD Part .V. WESTERN HEMISPHERE Introduction Wherever possible, this report gives the generic names of first- and second- order civil divisions and the number of such units for each country. "Country" is here interpreted loosely to cover nations, colonies, possessions and other types of units., For the most part, the data reflect de facto sovereignty as of. April 1958. The counting of a particular civil division under the name of a country, however, does not necessarily imply, recognition of its current political status by the United States Government. The data vary somewhat in completeness and accuracy from country to country. For some countries, the classification of towns presented problems, whereas for others, determining the rank and administrative role of.extensive divisions was .difficult.. Resolving the various problems offered wide latitude for choice, and the compilerswill quickly.concede that valid interpretations different from theirs can be placed on many. of the civil division patterns. The new Federation of the West Indies is treated as. a ttcountry" with component territories (former colonies) as first-order civil divisions. But since the federation is still in a formative stage, and some readers may prefer to regard the territories as;"countries'," their administrative arrangements are noted through third-order -- that is, former first-order division (under the federation, second order); former second-order division (under the federation, . third-order). Wherever appropriate, the generic names of civil divisions are followed by a translation.--.the "standard" translation where one could be:discerned, and the choice of the compilers in other cases. Where translations only were available, that is, where the official form in current use could not be identified with certainty, the translation is given by itself in brackets. In the Spanish-speaking areas of the WesternHemisphere, there is much similarity from country to.country in the terms used to identify civil divisions. Comparisons between countries should be made with caution, however, for identically named units in different countries may differ greatly in function. The.data given for each civil division category is that of the main source from which information was taken. Where basic data were drawn from numerous sources, the date may span several years. For the most part, geographic coordinates are taken from The Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the World, 1952 edition.. The references cited generally include the main sources from which data were taken. In some instances, it was necessary to note several references in order to give complete coverage for both first- and second-order units. References include maps,. lists, and works useful in interpreting administrative relationships. After each citation, a brief indication of the type of data presented by the-source is given. .Reference materials for.which call numbers or mapnumbers.are given in the citations.can be obtained on request from..the CIA Map Library, extension 2596. Maps with map numbers generally are obtainable as retention copies, whereas all items with call numbers are available only on loan. Most of.the unnumbered books,, reports, and documents that are cited as references are in the CIA Library (extension 8708), the Department of State Library, or the Library of Congress. A. few, however,.are available at the_CIA.Map.Library. Where reliability. of the data is particularly doubtful, or where some relationship is not covered by the available sources, the discrePancies.are noted under the heading "Gaps." Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 NORTH AMERICA Alaska Greenland Canada St. Pierre and Miquelon Bermuda United States Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 ATASKA An incorporated territory of the United States. Name and number of ?S I - .DIV:LS'IONS judicial division;- 1958 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DV15-TONS recording district To a: considerable extent the territory is administered as a single unit by the Government of the United States acting through a Governor and other officials appointed by the President of the United States, and through some 50 Federal agencies that have direct jurisdiction i.n Alaskan affairs."; A more limited range f governmental activities is carried out by the Territorial Govern- ment.for which legislators and certain other officials are elected by the voters of. Alaska. The relationship' between. Federal authority and Territorial authority i.s. complex, with some of the powers of the Governor, being shared with locally elected or appointed. official.sa The 4 judicial divisions.(identified by number) and their sub- divisions, the recording districts, are conventionally treated as the first- and second-order administrative entities largely because there is no other system of area breakdown that comes closer to being 'Aadm_tni.strativeU and systematically divides the entire area of the territory. It should be noted, however, that the judicial divisions are not. functionally comparable to the administrative unity of better-developed areas,- and that .mach governmental activity :i.s.conducted'without reference to their 'boun.dara.e The proper place of the 30 (as of 1955.) incorporated towns of Alaska in the administrative scheme is open to interpretation. Although subordinate to the Territorial Government, the towns are in some respects first-order administrative units-. Juneau, the capital of Alaska, is an incorporated town, but otherwise has no special status __-7A b'ill . admitting Alaska as the 1.9th State of the United States was passed by the U'.6. house of Representatives on. 22.8 May 1958 and by the U. S. Senate on 30 June 1;9580 Actual achievement of statehood will probably be consummated in December 1.958, when the President upon receiving 'various certifications proclaims Alaska a state. Until ad:rni.ssion. is thus formalized, the area will remain technically a territory with the civil divisions noted above. After the proclamation, Alaska ViLl become the 49th first-order civil division of the United States with second-order units,, somewhat comparable to .counties, called boroughs. The number of boroughs that will exist at the time statehood is proclaimed is not now.'known. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Alaska Resource Development Board. Biennial Report 1955-119,;57,p Juneau, 1.957; administrative relationships. Financial Data .Re ardin the Incorporated Towns and Cities of A14 Alaska .:Resource Development Board, Juneau,,. .195 administrative relationships; names of incorporated towns. Colby, M.. A. Guide t,o:Alaska$ The Macmillan Company, New York, 1954;, adaini strativ:e relationships . M.id~Gntury Alaska, United States Department of the Interior, Office of Territories, L.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1951; administrative relationships. A 1;3,000,0001 June 1956; National Geographic Society; limits of the judicial divisions. Alaoka 1:3,750,000; 1950; U.9. Government Printing Office; boundaries of judicial divisions and recording districts; locates settlements,, incorporated ones differentiated. Call No- 912.17. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 4 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 GFMMIANn A Danish possession formerly administered as a colony. .A constitutional change of 1953,made Greenland an integral part ofthe Danish Kingdom. Name and number of F -ORDER DIVI3IQNS (land territo 3 territory) 1957 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS kommunea 19 (municipality)* 1957 RED S The three territories are Vastergr$nland, Nordgr$nland, and Ostgr$nland. Vastergr~nland, wherein dwell most of the people of Greenland, is divided into 16. municipalities, each comprising several inhabited places. The "places'", however, may be merely single dwellings. Nordgr$nland has one. municipality -- Thule; Ostgr~nland has two -- Angmagssalik and Scoresbysund. Since there is no settlement in the interior, boundaries between civil divisions separate coastal sectors only. GodthAb is the capital. RUTRENCES, (a) Statistisk . rbog 1951, Denmark, Otatistiske Departement, Bianco Lunos Bogtrykkeri A/S, Copenhagen, 1957; administrative relationships; names of first- and second-order,units. (b) Grb'nland, 1:5,000,000) Denmark, Geodetic Institute, 1947; boundaries of first- and second-order units; data are not current but with the aid of ref. (a) the present boundaries of most-units can be worked out. Call No. 6580+, #.i translated in reference (a). GREENLAND Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 CANADA Name and number. of FIR ST -OR]J R DIVISIONS province: 10. 1958 territory: Name and number of SE0QNf -ORDER DIVISIONS 1955'56 [urban municipality]: ca.. 1,25.* [rural municipality]: ca. 1,695** county: 111 district.: 3 REMARKS The provinces are: Alberta, British Columbia,, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova..Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, and Saskatchewan. The 2 territories are Yukon (no subdivisions) and the Northwest Territories (divided into the 3 districts that are counted above as second-order divisions). The terms "rural municipality, and "urban municipality" as used above indicate similar entities known by different names in different provinces. For example: urban municipality: city, town, village, incorporated city, incorporated town, incorpo- rated village. rural municipality: municipal district, incorporated rural district., township, organized township, etc. "County" as used in Canada refers to many different types of units.few.of which are exactly comparable to the counties of the United States. The figure given above for counties ranking as second-order units covers only those of Ontario and Quebec. For parts of these provinces, counties function as administrative entities between province governments. and organized rural areas. The cities and most towns of Ontario.and.Quebec are not under county administration, although many are-within counties in a geographic sense. -Excludes some 636 villages and towns of Ontario arid:Quebec that are technically under counties and thus are not true second-order units; includes 17 Local government "communities" of New 'b'undlana and 12 incorporated villages of Prince Edward Island. **Excludes some 1,543 organized rural areas of Ontario and Quebec that are technically under counties and thus are not true second-order divisions; includes a; few Qntar. io -'"improvement districts", but excludes 12 similarly. named districts in Saskatchewan; for Manitoba, includes 5 "suburban. municipalities" but not the "local government districts `?; 7 "county municipalities" of Alberta are included, but the 53 Alberta 1i.mprovement. districts" are excluded. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 CANADA con't REMARKS Although several provinces other than Quebec and Ontario have con't "counties", these either do not have governments or are con- ventionally classified as "rural municipalities." In Alberta, counties are being formed under a plan for the administration of municipal affairs, local schools, and hospitals by one council. Those formed to date are counted above as "rural municipalities." Nova Scotia has 18 counties, 12 of which are coextensive with rural municipalities, whereas 6 are divided into 2 rural munici- palities each. As such, the counties of NovaScotia do not represent local units of self-government. The 15 counties of New Brunswick are, excluding the areas of certain towns and cities, coextensive with the 15 rural municipalities of that province. The 3 counties of Prince Edward Island are nominal units without governments. Throughout Canada there are numerous special purpose authorities with areas of responsibility that may take in all or part of several civil divisions. Some of these have acquired functions other than those for which they were originally formed and, in some cases, the line between multipurpose civil division and special jurisdiction cannot be sharply drawn. Ottawa, the capital of Canada, is a self-governing municipality. The Federal Government, however, has long played an important role in its planning and development. REFERENCES Note: Many readily available maps correctly represent the boundaries of the provinces and territories. Numerous equally available maps show the limits of the second-order divisions, but are generally inadequate in completeness of detail and currency of data. Putting together a relatively complete and up-to-date boundary picture for the second-order units of any one province normally requires a large and heterogeneous assortment of maps -- some at quite large scales. Moreover, many of the available maps showing second-order unit boundaries also give the limits of a variety of other entities (judicial districts, census districts, election districts, ad hoc authorities, etc.) that are not true civil divisions. Thus, in determining any boundary, considerable analysis may be required to separate wheat from chaff. Canada, Bureau of Statistics. The Canada Yearbook 1955, Edmond Cloutier, Queen's Printer, Ottawa, 1955; administrative relationships; includes 1:8,870,400 map showing province and territory boundaries. Canadian Almanac and Directory; Copp Clark Publishing Co., Ltd., Toronto, 1957; administrative relationships; names of first- and second-order units. The Statesman's Year-Book 1927, Macmillan and Co., Ltd., London, 1957; administrative relationships; number of units. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 CANADA con's t REFERENCES Brown, George W.. Canada, University of California Press, con't Berkeley, 1950; administrative relationships (Chapter XII, local government). Lawrence, Bertha. Canada in the Modern World, J..L Dent and Sons, Ltd., Toronto, 1955; administrative relationships; historical development of local government p..395-412. Available map coverage for the boundaries of second-order units leaves much.to be desired in completeness, currency, and clarity. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO92000050004-1 ST. PIERRE AND MIQUELON A French overseas territory comprising 2 islands and a.number of small adjacent islets off the south coast of Newfoundland near 1+8o50'N-56?l5'Wa. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS commune: 2 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS. The population of the islands is not dense enough. to require precisely delimited administrative units. As far as can be determined, the commune of St-Pierre takes in the entire island .of that name and adjacent islets. Miquelon commune apparently comprises all of Grande Miquelon .and PetiteMiquelon (Langlade). In the past, a settlement on Petite Miquelon may have ranked as another commune. The town of St. Pierre is the capital of the territory as a whole. There is doubt about the sovereignty status of the. easternmost island of the St. Pierre and Miquelon group -- Isle.Verte, 48o521N-56005'W. According to.reference (a) and other French sources, half the island belongs to France. Confirmation of Canadian ownership of part of the island has not yet been found in Canadian sources, although reference (a) indicates that the British (Canadians-7) have erected a I"ighthouse,on the island. REFERENCES (a) Bottin de Madagascar des Territoires,D'Amerique et D'0ceanie,, Didot-Bottin, Paris, 1957; administrative relationships. (b) Dictionnaire des Communes, Editions Berger-Levrault, Paris, 15-56; names of communes. (c) Leitch, Adelaide. "The Poker-Faced Islands of France Canadian Geographical Journal, Vol.,I, No. 3, September 1950, p. 105-119; administrative-relationships. Data are needed on the current status of Isle Verte. 8 - ST. FIERR.E.AND MIQTJFLON Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 United Kingdom Crown Colony in the western Atlantic; includes several islands centered near 32015'N-64o51'Wa Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS parish: 9 1957 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS There are two towns, St. George and Hamilton (the capital), in which municipal taxes.are levied. Hamilton is governed by a corporation. Whether these two municipalities should be regarded as entities separate from the parishes in which they are located is amoot question. REFERENCE Bermuda: Report for the Years 1955 and 1956, Her.Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1958; administrative.relationships and.names.of units; includes a 1:60,000 map shoving parish names and boundaries. 9 m BERMUDA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 UNITED STATES* Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS state: .48 1958 district: 1 Name and number of SECOND-QRDER DIVISIONS county: 3,004 1956-57 parish: 64 independent city: 34 REMARKS The number of states will increase to 49 when. Alaska is officially proclaimed a state, probably in December 1958. For details regarding the. current status of Alaska,. see p. 2. The single first-order district, the District of Columbia, is. coextensive with the City of Washington, capital of the United 2 States. The District of Columbia has no subdivisions that can be referred to as general-purpose administrative units of second-order rank. .The number of counties per state ranges from 3 (Delaware) to 254 (Texas). States alad counties vary greatly in. area and population, and some counties are actually larger and more populous than some states. A few counties are: merely nominal units without governments, but no attempt has been made to exclude them from the total given above. The 64 parishes, all located in the State of Louisiana, differ only in name from the counties of other states. The figure for independent cities, drawn from reference (a), breaks down as follows: Virginia: 32; Maryland: 1 (Baltimore); Missouri: 1 (St..Louis). The cities are independent in the sense that they are not subject to county authority. Many other cities not officially recognized as "independent cities" approach this status in fact. The administrative arrangements of New York City are anomalous in that the city takes in the total area of 5 counties. City administration is handled through 5 boroughs, each coextensive with one of the 5 counties. Three of the boroughs (Bronx, Richmond, and.Queens) take the names of the counties with which they coincide; the other 2 have different names: New York County/Manhatten Borough; Kings.Coun.ty/Brooklyn Borough. The 5 counties of New York City have been included in the total given above; in some lists, they are not counted as regular counties. 'Only the continental United States is considered here -.that is, the states and the District of Columbia. Data for territories, associated commonwealths, possessions, and other types of entities over which the United States exercises sovereignty are set forth elsewhere in appropriate regional sections. -.10 - UNITED STATES Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 UNITED STATES contt REMARKS The basic third-order divisions are municipalities (cities and con't towns) and townships (essentially rural divisions of.counties, although they include towns in the New England States, New York, and.Wisconsin). In 1952, there were 16,778 municipalities and 17,202 townships. Throughout.the United States, many public services are dispensed by ad hoc authorities with areas of jurisdiction that may take in all or part of several civil divisions. Such authorities now number about 72,000, of which some 60.,000 are school districts. REFERENCES Note: Numerous.mateials offer pertinent data. on the:civil divisions of the United States. The items-noted below are merely representative of those that are readily available. (a) U.S. Bureau of the Census. County and City Data Book 1956, A Statistical Abstract Supplement, U.S. Government'Printing Office, Washington, 1957; names of first- and second-order civil divisions; boundaries shown on accompanying small-scale state maps. (b) U.S. Bureau of the Census. Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1956, Seventy-seventh edition, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1956;. administrative.relationships; number of lower-order units. (c) Webster`s Geographical Dictionary, G.and C. Merriam Co.,, Springfield, Mass., 1957; names of first- and second-order units; boundaries shown on accompanying small-scale state maps. (d) The World Almanac) New York World-Telegram Corporation, New. York, 1958; names of first- and second-order units.. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 MIDDLE AMERICA (Mainland) Mexico Guatemala British Honduras Honduras El Salvador Nicaragua Costa Rica Panama Panama Canal Zone Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER. DIVISIONS 1957 estado: 29 (state) distrito federal: 1 (federal district) territorio: 2 (territory) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS municipio: 2,3+7 (municipality) 1976 delegation.: 21i- (delegation) congregation autonoma: 1 (autonomous congregation) REMARKS The distrito federal and the 2 territorios are divided into 24+ delegaciones, 13 of which are in the distrito federal. The urban core of Mexico City falls largely within one of the 13 delegaciones. The municipios, the basic units of local government, vary greatly in area, population, and urban-rural proportions. The municipio seat (city, town, or village) has no corporate identity apart from the munici io as a whole. Since virtually all towns of any importance and many of no importance) are rn icipio seats, city government and municii.o government are one and the same thing. All localities in Mexico are assigned a:"political category" designation: ciudad (city), villa (town), ueblo (settlement), e ido (communal or semicommunal farming unit , hacienda (landed estate), rancho (small land holding), etc. A typical mun might comprise a city (the administrative seat) and 10 to 15 units of lesser status. The number of municipios per state ranges from 4 in Baja California Norte to some 570 in Oaxaca. Municip os are so numerous in Oaxaca that their boundaries cannot be shown on maps at small or medium scales. For this reason, many Mexican maps, including references (b) and (f), give only the boundaries of some 30 former distritos for Oaxaca. Various lists, including one in reference 07 group Oaxaca municipios under the names of former distritos.. It should be noted that use of the former distritos in presenting data for Oaxaca is an arrangement of convenience; the units have no current administrative significance. The congr2Zacion.autonoma is located in-the state of Nuevo Leon. It may be a special dministrative arrangement for a native (Indian) community, but particulars are not given in readily available sources. MEXICO Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 MEXICO con't REFERENCES (a) Compendio Estadfstico, Mexico, Secretaria de E:conomfa,. 10 Direccio General de Estadfetica, Talleres Graficos de la Nacion,.Mexico City, 1957; administrative relationships; number of units; names of first-order units. (b) Estados Unidos Mexicanos Division Munici al; ca. 1:1,.000,000;. Mexico, $eccion de Econom , Direccion General de Estadfstica, 1950; names and.boundaries.of first and second-order units, except Oaxaca municipios. Call No. 78516. (c) Tucker, W.P.. The Mexican Government Today, University of Minnesota dress, Minneapolis, 1957; administrative relationships. (d) Annuario Estadistico de los;Estados Unidos.Mexicanos, Mexico, Secretar a de E.conom a, Direccion General de .Estadistica, Mexico City, 195+; list of Oaxaca municipios grouped by former distritos, p. 91. (e) Integration Territorial de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, Mexic?, Secret de Economia Direccion General de Estadistieo, Mexico City, 1952; names of all units in hierarchic outline. Call No. gC201.M49. (f) Atlas Geo rafico de los Estados-Unidos Mexicanos, Mexico, Secretar a.de Agriculture y Fomento, Mexico City, 1946; munici io boundaries (except for Oaxaca) shown on state maps at 1:7-0,000- 1:2,000,000; not' as current as ref. (b) but useful because of larger scales; includes list of coastal islands and states or territories to which they belong. Call No. aC201.M47 19-6 (a). Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Name-and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 22* (department) 1956 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS municipio: 322 (municipality) REMARKS Departamentos vary greatly in area, population, and number of municipios (5 to 31). The municipios of Guatemala are basically similar to those of numerous other Latin.Americancountries. Each includes a seat (city, town, or village) and-a.surrounding area, usually rural. The settlement that serves as administrative seat has no corporate existence apart from the municipio as a.whole. Oince virtually all towns of any importance are municipio seats, city government is municipio government. In the towns that are also seats of departamentos, however, the line between municipio government and departamento government may not be sharply drawn. Technically, Guatemala City, the capital, has no special status other than its position as a municipio and.departamento seat. REFERENCES Matheu, Jorge D.V.. Guia Socio eo rafica de Guatemala, Tipograffa Nacional de Guatemala, Guatemala City, 1956; administrative relationships; names of first- and second- order units. .n Ea de la Republica de Guatemala, 1:800,000; Direction General de Estad stica; 1952; boundaries of first- and second-order units. Call No. 50285. .[Departments of the Republic of Guatemala]; 1:200,000 through 1:800,000; Direction General de Estadfstica; 1953-?; individual departamento maps showing names and boundaries of municipios; complete coverage; Call No. 93716. Guatemala; 1:1,000,000; 1953; departamento names and boundaries. Map.No. 12208. ~` Officially 23, according to some Guatemalan sources, the 23rd being Belize (Belice) British Honduras, which Guatemala claims. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 BRITISH HONDURAS (United Kingdom Crown Colony) Name.and number of MST-ORDER .DIVISIONS district: 6 1955 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS See Remarks REMARKS Each district, except Belize, is under a District Commissioner whose field of duties is very wide. In the Belize District, much administration is exercised. directly by the colony government from Belize Town, and the functions of the officer responsible for the district outside the town differ materially from those of a District Commissioner. As far as can be determined, the cays and islets along the coast, some of which are inhabited, are under the administration of the coastal districts they adjoin. The 7 towns with local government boards are in some respects the only second-order divisions. All of the towns are small except Belize, the population of which comprises. about one third of the colony total. REFERENCES Colonial Report: British Honduras 122 , Her Majesty' s. Stationery Office,, London, 1957; administrative relationships; names of districts and "local authority" towns; district boundaries shown on accompanying 1:950,000 map. The Colonial Office List 1951, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London.; administrative relationships; names of districts. 15 - BRITISH HONDURAS Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 HONDURAS Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 18 September 1957 (department) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS municipio: 24+5 (municipality) 1952-55 distrito: 36 (district) REMARKS In February 1957, a new :departamento (Gracias a Dios) was formed from the eastern portion of the Departamento.de Colon. It comprises a jungle area that has long been in dispute between Honduras and Nicaragua. The islands off the north coast form a single departamento: Islas de la Bahia. The municipios of Honduras are similar to those of numerous other Iatin_American countries in that they include a seat (city, town, or village) and an adjacent area,'-usually rural. Distritos, of which at least four types are recognized (territorial, departmental, sectional, and local) are merely the most important municipios, i.e., they comprise the largest towns. Distritos differ from normal municipios in that their governments. are directed to a considerable extent by the national government. Tegucigalpa, the capital, is the seat of the Distrito Territorial de Tegucigalpa (also called Distrito Central). Whether the distritos, or some of them, might be more appropriately ranked as first-order divisions is a question available data.do not answer definitively. REFERENCES Bolletin, Honduras, Secretarfa de Fomento, Direccion General de Cartograffa, Tegucigalpa, September 1957, Ano 1, Nr. 2, departamento names and boundaries on end paper map at ca. 1:2,000,000;. includes boundary of new departamento formed in 1957. Primer Censo Agropecuario 1952, Honduras, Direccion General de Censos y Estadistica, 1954; Lad Dreikorn, San Salvador, 195+; boundaries of first- and second-order units on 1:2,700,000 map; names (distritos not differentiated) keyed to map by number. Division Politico-Territorial de la Re ublica.de Honduras, Honduras, Direccion General de Censor y Estad stica Nacional, Talleres Tipograficos Nacionales, Tegucigalpa, 1952; names of all units in hierarchic outline (distritos differentiated by type). Stokes, W.S.. Honduras: An.Area Study in Government, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, 1950; administrative relationships. GAPS The status of the distritos needs clarification. - 16 - Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 EL SALVADOR Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIQNS departamento: (department) .Name and number of SECON.O-QRDER DTVISIQNS distrito (district): 39 1955 REMARKS It is questionable whether much administrittion is exercised at the distrito level and there is reason to view the municipios, of which there-were some 260 in 1955, as the basic.second-order divisions, their officlalthird-order statue , not. withstanding. Town government is municipio government. Each munici io comprises a seat (which may be designated Ciudad/city, villa village, etc. to-indicate its.relative importance) and an adjacent area, usually rural, The seat does not have a,corporate identity separate from that of the.municipio as a whole. REFERENCES Atlas Censal de El Salvador, Ministerio,de Economfa, D.ireccion Generalde Estad stica y Censos, El Salvador, 1955;.names of units first- through. third-order; boundaries-of departamentos and municipios shown on map at 1:1,000,000. Call No. aC308.S73 1955. . GAPS .Peaslee, A.J.. Constitutions of Nations, Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 1956; administrative relationships.(El Salvador constitution, p. 815-851). Additional dataare.needed on.distrito functions and boundaries. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Including the Corn Islands some 50 miles off the east coast. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 16 (department) 1952 distrito federal: 1 (federal district) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS comarca: 1 (territory) municipio: 122 1952 REMARKS (municipality) The Corn Islands, although leased by the United States since 1914, are administered by Nicaragua as part of the Departamento de Zelaya. The distrito federal apparently comprises a small part of Managua, capital of Nicaragua, but its limits are not made clear by readily available data. Comarca del Cabo Gracias a Dios, the first-order territory, takes in northeasternmost Nicaragua and, as defined on Nicaraguan maps, also includes an area claimed by Honduras. The municipios vary greatly in size. On the east coast, they extend over large areas, whereas in some of the more densely settled parts of the country they take in little more than a town and its immediate environs. The municipio seat (city, town, or village) has no corporate existence apart from the municiplo asa whole. Municipios are subdivided into third-order comarcas of which there were some 1,430 in 1952. "Comarca" can be translated as "territory, district, quarter, region, or tract." As used in Nicaragua in reference to third-order divisions, "district" seems to be the most appropriate translation. The 1 comarca counted above as a first-order division may not be so regarded officially. REFERENCZ8 Mapa de la Republica de Nicaragua: Division Folftica; 1:1,250,000; Direcci6n CT_ Aal de Estadistica; corrected to 1952; names and boundaries of de, ap rtamentos and municipios. Call No. 78380. Censo General de Poblacion de la?Republica de Nicaragua Mayo 1950, Vol. XVII, Ministerio de Economia, Direction General de Estadistica y Censos, Managua, Aug 195-; names of all units; boundaries of first- and second-order units (except distrito federal) shown on sketchy map at 1:3,000,000. Call No. gC305.N52 v. 17. GAPS Clarification of the rank of the first-order comarca is needed. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 COSTA RICA. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 7 (province) 1955 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS canton: 64 1955 REMARKS The city of San Jose, capital of Costa Rica, has no special status other than its position.as center of a canton and administrative seat of the Provincia.de.San Joa. The canton comprises 11 distritos (districts; third-order units) 4 of which take in the urban core of San Jose whereas 7 are suburban. In areas of relatively dense population, the canton is apparently the basic unit of local government with the third-order distritos, of which there were 323 in 1955, functioning as unimportant subdivisions. Where population is sparse, however, government at the distrito level may be of considerable local importance. In such areas distritos are quite large. Normally uninhabited Cocos Island (05?30'N-87?O0'W) is attached administratively to.Provincia de Puntarenas. REFERENCES Division Territorial Administrativa.de la Reublica.de Costa Rica, Costa Rica, Ministerio de Econom a y Hacienda, Direccion General de Estadfstica y Censos, San Jose, 1955; administrative relationships; names of all units in hierarchic outline. Costa Rica; 1:1,300,000; 1956; provincia names and boundaries. Map No. 25346. [Administrative Divisions of Costa Rica]; 1:1,250,000; Direccion General de Estadfstica y Censos, 1950; names and boundaries of units first- through third-order. Call No. 97170. [Costa Rica: Provinces, Cantons, and Districts]; various scales; Instituto Geografico - Costa Rica, 1949-50; some 50 sheets, mostly maps of individual cantons and distritos; coverage may not be complete. Call No. 50970. 19 - COSTA RICA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 10 PANAMA' Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 9 1957 (province) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS distrito: 63 (district) 1950-55 comarca: 1 (territory) REMARKS Nearshore islands fit into the provincia, distrito, comarca pattern. The distritos are similar to units called municipios elsewhere in Latin.America. Most distritos comprise a seat (city, town, or village) and an adjacent area, usually rural. A distrito seat has no corporate identity apart from the distrito as a whole. The city of Panama, located near the Pacific end of the canal, is the capital of the country and of the provincia and distrito of the same name, but otherwise has no special status. The city of Colon, the Atlantic canal terminal, is geographically within the Canal Zone, but is administered by Panama and is the seat of both the provincia and distrito of Colon. The Comarca de San Blas takes in a strip along the northeast coast and adjacent islands. Inhabited by the strong-minded Cuna or Tule Indians, it is administered in theory at least as a component of the Provincia de Colon. Work on the 1950 census revealed a number of discrepancies between various laws and administrative boundaries as shown on available maps. In 1953, a committee charged with rectifying this situation was reportedly being set up by the Panamanian Ministry of Government and Justice. REFERENCES Rubio, Angel.. Peguen.o Atlas.Geografico de Panama., Editora Istmena S.A.,.Panama, 1955; names of first- and second-order units in hierarchic outline, boundaries shown on accompanying map at 1:3,600,000. Call No. aC306.R8 1955. Censos Nacionales de 1950, Primer Censo A ro ecuario, Vol. II, Caracter sticas de las E lotaciones,.Contraloria General de la.Reptiblica, Direcci6n de Estadistica y Censo, Panama, 1957; names of first- and second-order units;. boundaries shown on map at 1:1,750,000. *The United States-administered Canal Zone is discussed under Panama Canal Zone, p. 21. 11 20 -. PANAMA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 PANAMA CANAL 'ZONE A strip of territory roughly 10.miles wide extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific across the Isthmus of Panama. The area is under perpetual lease to the United States from the Republic of Panama for operation.and maintenance of the Panama Canal. The Canal Zone includes Gatun Lake and the reservoir district above.A.lhajuela (Madden Dam), but riot the cities of Panama and Colon. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS Civil control is exercised by the Canal Zone Government established in 1951-..simultaneousl;`with the Panama Canal Company. The Governor of the Canal Zone heads the Canal Zone Government and is also chief executive of the Panama Canal Company. In its capacity as owner of the Panama.Canal Company, the United States is represented by the Secretary of the Army. Noland in the-`Canal Zone is privately owned and the area has no counties or strictly comparable units. In the 1950 Census, towns and other entities are grouped under the two court districts. The court districts, however, are not true administrative divisions. The settlements identified as "minor geographic.regions" in the 1950 census include all but about 1.5 percent of the permanent civilian population, but it does not seem appropriate to consider these "regions" as-civil divisions. Thirty-six in number, they include rural areas, a leper colony, a prison, and 22 "towns," the latter ranging in population from 15 to more than 4,000. FERENCES U.S. Bureau of the Census. U.S. Census of Population: 1 0, Vol. I, Number of Inhabitants,, Chapter 51 American Samoa, Canal Zone, Guam, and Virgin Islands of the U.S., U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1951; administrative relationships; includes.1:250,000 map showing location of towns. United States Government Organization Manual 1957_58; Federal Register Division, National. Archives and Record Service, General Services. Administration, U.S Government Printing Office, Washington;. administrative relationships. - 21 PANAMA CANAL ZONE Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 SECTION C MIDDLE AMERICA (Insular) West Indies (Federation of the West Indies) Caribbean Islands Claimed by the United States and Colombia Serranilla Bank Swan Island Cuba Bahamas Navassa Island Haiti Dominican Republic Puerto Rico Virgin Islands of the United States British Virgin Islands Netherlands Antilles Guadeloupe Martinique Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 T. -WEST INDIES (Federation of the West Indies) The Federation unites the United Kingdom island colonies of ..Antigua, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada,, Jamaica, Montserrat, St..Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla, St.. Lucia, .St. Vincent, and Trinidad and Tobago. Other United Kingdom dependencies in Middle America -- British Guiana,,.British Honduras,.The Bahamas, And the British Virgin Islands -.remain outside the Federation of the West Indies. Name and, number of ,FIRST-2M ER DIVISIONS territory: 10 Name and number of SECOND-QRDER DIVISIONS The Interim Federal Government came into existence in..January 1958 and in. April 1958 the federal legislature was formally inaugurated. The capital of the Federation is Port of Spain on the I$and of Trinidad. The individual colonies-that form the Federation are treated above as "territories1?'. functioning as :first-order civil divisions. But since the Federation is.still in a formative stage, with little uniformity in the lower-order units of the territories, second- and third-order divisions are discussed individually for each.territory in the pages that follow. For readers who prefer to treat the federated territoriesge 'xcountries", these divisions become first- and second-order.. The advent of the Federation of the West Indies eliminates the "Leeward Islands" and the. "Windward Islands" as political entities, although it. is likely that these terms will still be used to some extent in a geographic sense. REFEiENCE The West Indies: A Nation in the Making, Reference Division, Central Office of Information, London, December 1957; administrative relationships; constitution of the West Indies, D. 11; includes,a.slcetchy small-scale map on which the federated territories. are differentiated from other United Kingdom possessions in. Middle. America. 22 - THE WEST INDIES Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 -Federation of the West Indies .ANTIGUA. The main island is.centered.at 17?05'N-61?47'W? Politically, Antigua includes Barbuda Island, 17?40'N-61?50'Wx and Redonda Island, 16055'N-62019'W. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS pariahs 6 1954. Name-and number of THIRD.-ORDER DIVISIONS Apparently, the island is now administered largely as a single unit; the degree, if any, to which the.parishes function as governmental entities is not made clear by available. data. The municipal affairs of St. John, the capital, until recently were directed by a group of 'Tcity commissioners,'r but are now handled by. the Colony Government. Barbuda Island has.a population of about 900.and requires no civil divisions. A small administrative staff resides on the island. Administrative arrangements. currently a plicable to Redonda Island (less than.1 square mile in area are unknown. The phosphate deposits have been exploited from time to.time but,. apparently,, are not worked now; the island may be uninhabited or nearly so. REk'ERENCE Colonial Reports. Leeward Islands 1953 and _1254, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1956; administrative relationships; parish names and boundaries are given on accompanying map at 1!175,000- - 23 - ANTIGUA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies BARBADOS Barbados is a single island centered at 13?09'N-59?33'W. Name and number of SECQND-O& R DIYIaio parish: 11 Name and number of THIRD;' RDER DIVISIONS REMARKS For most purpose's, the island is administered as l unit, but some matters such as,public health,-Welfarex and road maintenance are handled by vestries and boards-of the 11 parishes. The urban area of.Bridgetown, the capital, iS;divided between 2 parishes but the core of the city is within St. Michael Parish. An act passed by the legislature in 1951 provides for a radical reconstruction of administrative arrangements. Under the new ordinance the island will be divided into 1 municipal area (Bridgetown) and 2 rural areas. Bridgetown will have. an. elected city council and mayor, and the 2 rural areas will be governed by elected district councils. According to reference (a), however, this scheme is not yet in effect and, apparently, no implementation date has been set. REWERENC (a) Fact Sheets on the U.K. Dependencies: :Facts.&bout Barbados, Reference Division, Central Office of Information, London, January 1958; administrative relationships. (b) Colonial Reports: Barbados 1254 and 1955, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1957; administrative relationships;; names and boundaries of parishes: given .on_accompanying map at 1:250,000. -.24 .BARBADOS Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies DOMINICA Dominica . is a .single island centered at 15?25'N-61021'W. Name and number. of COMA-ORDER DIVISIONS. district: 3 1955 Name and number of THIRD,-ORDER DIVISIONS parish: 10 19 5 town, 2 REMARKS To some extent the island is administered as a:single unit. Some governmental functions, however, seem to be exercised through 3 . namelessand.sketchily defined districts. District limits apparently follow parish boundaries, but whether it is proper in a strict sense to.regard the parishes.as subdivisions of the districts is not made clear by available data. Also uncertain is the extent, if any, to which the parishes function as. administrative entities. The towns, both of which have town boards, are Portsmouth and Roseau, the capital. Colonial Reports: Dominica 1953 andl ).Her Majesty's Stationery Office,,. London, 1955; administrative relationships; includes 1:150,000 map..showing parish names and boundaries (with map and text, approximate location of district boundaries can be worked out). 25 DOMINICA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies GRENADA Grenada Island is centered at 12oll''N-61?41'W. Politically, Grenada includes the island of Carriacou some 20 miles to the north and the islets-of the Grenadine group lying between Carriacou and Grenada Island. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS parish: 1954 town: Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS For the most part,-the island is administered as a single entity. Some governmental functions, however, are carried out by 6 "district boards)" one for each parish. The Island of Carriacou with a population of some 7,000 is treated as.a parish,.but is .not called one. Its municipal affairs.are managed by a"town authority," and it is therefore listed above as a town. REFERENCE Colonial Reports: Grenada 1954, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1957; administrative relationships; includes 1;125,000 map giving parish names and boundaries. - 26 - GRENADA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies JAMAICA. A large island about 90 miles.south of Cuba. Politically, Jamaica includes Pedro and Morant Cays to the.south and, as dependencies,.the Cayman Islands.and the Turks and Caicos Islands.* lame and number of $ECQN, ,!- FXP . IVIS1Q W county: 195T Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS corporate area: 1 .1957 parish: 12 REMARKS To a considerable extent the island is administered as.a single unit by a department of the central administration. The current role of the counties is obscure and it might be proper to disregard them as-administrative entities. 'The corporate area comprises the former parishes of Kingston, St. Andrew,, and Port Royal. It includes the City of Kingston and considerable adjacent territory. The city, however, has no government apart from that of the Kingston and 8t. Andrew Corporation. The parishes have governments (councils),. with responsibilities in the spheres of public health, public welfare,, water supply, minor road maaintenance,.market supervision, and fire prevention. Virtually all important towns outside the corporate area.are parish -capitals" and there seems to beno.distinction between town. government and parish government.. Recent official maps name but do.not bound several districts within each parish. As far as can be.determined, these are merely, regions without administrative significance. For judicial purposes,,, the normally uninhabited Pedro and Morant Gays are attached to the Kingston and St..Andrew Corporation. REFERENCES Jamaica:. .Report for the Year 1956r Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London,. 195T; administrative relationships; names of units; county boundaries shown on accompanying 1:250,000 map. The Handbook of Jamaica for 1956.Government Printing Office, Kingston, 1956; administrative relationships. Colonial Reports: Jamaica 1953, Her Majesty .Stationery Office, London, 1956;. administrative relationships;. includes 1.700,000.map showing parish and county boundaries. Data are needed on the status of the counties, especially on whether they can be properly regarded as administrative entities. -x'The civil divisions of the dependencies. of Jamaica are . discussedon p.28. - 27 - JAMAICA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies DEPENDENCIES OF JAMAICA The dependencies of Jamaica include the Turks and Caicos Islands, which are geographically part of the Bahamas chain and lie between 21?00' and 22?00'N and between 71?00' and 72030'W;; and also the Cayman Islands, which are some 120 miles northwest of Jamaica near 2O0OO1N-800001W. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS island group: 2 1956-57 [Cayman Islands; Turks and Caicos Islands] Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS district: 13 1956-57 REMARKS [Cayman Islands] island with official in residence: 3 [Turks and Caicos Islands] The administration of each dependency is carried out by a commissioner responsible directly to the Governor of Jamaica. The rank of the dependencies and their divisions is open to various interpretations. If the Federation of the West Indies is regarded as a."country" with Jamaica as a first-order division, the dependencies themselves fall into place as second-order units and their subdivisions become third-order divisions as indicated above. On the other hand, if the dependencies are considered to be country-like entities in their own right, their subdivisions listed above as third-order would be first-order units. All of the Cayman Islands "districts" may not be administrative entities in a strict sense. Seven districts are on Grand Cayman, the most populous island. Of the remaining 6 districts, 4 are on Cayman Brac and 2 on Little Cayman. Georgetown, on Grand Cayman, is the administrative seat for the Cayman Islands as a whole. All 3 of the "islands with official in residence" are in the Turks and Caicos Islands. One is South Caicos and the post of residence is Cockburn Harbor. The District Commissioner at this post is responsible for the 4 "district board areas" of the Caicos: Middle Caicos, Bambarra and Conch Bar, Bottle Creek and New, and Blue Hills. Technically, if the Federation of the West Indies is viewed as a "country",.the 4 district board areas are fourth-order units. Salt Cay, in the Turks Islands, also has an official in residence. The third island in this category is Grand Turk. The Grand Turk official in residence is Commissioner for the Turks and Caicos Islands.as a whole. REFERENCES Cayman Islands: Report for the Years 1955 and 1956, Her.Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 19571 administrative relationships;. names of districts; boundaries of the Grand Cayman districts shown on accompanying 1:50,000 map. Turks and Caicos Islands: Report for the Years 1955 and 1926, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1957; administrative relationships; includes 1:250,000 location map (no boundaries); with text and map, approximate limits of the administrative units can be worked out. - 28 - DEPENDENCIES OF JAMAICA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approv?d For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies MONTSERRAT A. single island centered at 16dLI5'N-629ll1W. Name and number of SECOND-QR] E;R. DIVISIONS parish: 3 1937 Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS As far as can be determined, the island is administered largely as a single unit.. The degree, if any, to which the 3 parishes function as governmental entities is not made clear by available .data. FERFC Montserrat: Report for the Years 1955 and 1956, Her Majeoty's Stationery Office, London, 1958, administrative relationships,; accompanying.1:175,000map shows parish names and boundaries. 29 - MONTSERRAT Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation.of the West Indies ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLk Includes: St. Christopher (St. Kitts), 17?2O'N-62?)+0'W; Nevis, 17?O91N- 620351W; Anguilla and adjacent islets, 18?15'N-63?10'W; and Sombrero Island, 18936'N-63?29'w. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS parish: 13 1954 Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS Eight of the 13 parishes are on St. Christopher and 5 are on Nevis. The degree, if any, towhich the parishes function as administrative units cannot be determined from available data. Sparsely populated Anguilla Island is not divided into parishes, apparently. Sombrero Inland is uninhabited except for a lighthouse maintenance staff. REFERENCE Colonial Reports: Leeward Islands 1953 and 1954, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1956; administrative relationships; parish names.and boundaries for St. Christopher and Nevis are given on. accompanying map at 1:180,000. - 30 ST CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies ST. LUCIA An island centered at.13?52 LN,61?00?W. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS district: 4 1954 Name.and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS See Remarks REMARKS The island is governed to some extent as a single unit. Insome matters, however, the 1 districts are functional administrative entities in that their chief officers serve as the line of communication between the Central Administration and "local authorities" (towns and villages). In a sense, the settlements (especially those with councils or improvement committees) are third-order civil divisions, but their.number.is not known. The capital, Castries (population approximately 24,000), has a town board that apparently deals directly with the central administration on some matters, but whether the town should be regarded as equal in rank to a district is a moot question.. REFERENCE. Colonial Reports: St. Lucia 1253 and 1954, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1956; administrative relationships; district names and boundaries shown on accompanying 1:125,000 - 31 - ST. LUCIA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies ST. VINCENT The center of the main island is near 13?15'N-61?10'W. Politically, St. Vincent includes Union (the most southerly, 12 ?35'N-61?25'W), Mayreau, Canouan, Mustique, Bequia, and other lesser islands of the Grenadine group. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS town: 1 town district: 5 village district: REMARKS St. Vincent and its dependencies to the south (the Grenadines) are administered to some extent as a single unit against a background of "local authority" entities that are not clearly identified in available sources. An ordinance of 1951 provides for the division of the colony into town and village districts, with the Governor being empowered to define such districts from time to time. The boundaries of these units are not known. Also unexplained is the relationship, if any, between the districts and the 5 parishes of St. Vincent that are shown on official maps. Few data are available on administrative arrangements applicable to the Grenadines. Some village councils are known to exist in the islands, however, and Bequia Island has reportedly been declared a district under a council that has authority over the whole island. Municipal, affairs of the capital, Kingstown, are handled by a board ("body corporate") that is apparently somewhat superior in status to the boards of town districts. Kingstown, therefore, has been set forth separately above as a "town". REFERENCE Colonial Reports.St. Vincent 1954 and 1955, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1956; administrative relationships; parish names and boundaries are shown on accompanying 1:150,000 map. GAPS Additional data are needed on all aspects of the administrative system. - 32 -- ST. VINCENT Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Federation of the West Indies TRINIDAD.AND TOBAGO Two moderately large islands and various small islets centered near 11000'N- 61o00'W. Name and number of SECOND-ORDER. DIVISIONS municipality: 3 1957+ district: 7 (For 8 counties, see Remarks) Name and number of THIRD-ORDER DIVISIONS ward: 30 1957+ parish: 7 REMARKS The administrative system is quite complex and the generic names of the different units are not always used consistently. The 3 municipalities are Port-of-Spain, San Fernando, and Arima -- all on the Island of Trinidad. Available evidence indicates that they are regarded as being equal to counties or districts in rank. Municipalities apparently have no well-defined subdivisions. Government is exercised through the 7 administrative districts. Trinidad is also.divided into 8 counties that relate to the districts as follows: 4 districts are coextensive with counties; subdivisions: 20 wards. 2 districts include 4 counties (2 each); subdivisions: 10 wards. The Island of Tobago constitutes the 7th districts 1 district; subdivisions: 7 parishes. REFERENCES Colonial Reports: Trinidad and Tobago 1954, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1956, administrative relationships; includes 1:450,000 map giving names and boundaries of counties, wards, and parishes. Lesser Antilles; 1:250,000; (Trinidad sheet) 1950; county names and boundaries. Series No. AMS E 541. - 33 - TRINIDAD.AND.TOBAGO Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 CARIBBEAN ISLANDS CLAIMED BY THE UNITED STATES AND COLOMBIA In this category are 3 named groups of banks, rocks, islets, and cays in the Caribbean some 350 miles north of the Panama.Canal. They include: Quito Sue1o Bank (11?20`N-81?l0'W), Serrana Bank (11?25TN-80?16'W), Roncador Cay (13?35'N-8o?o1 w). Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS The islands and islets are normally uninhabited. Administration now exercised by the United States is limited to the maintenance of aids to navigation, a responsibility of the U.S. Coast Guard. Colombia regards the disputed islands and islets as parts of an archipelago coextensive with the Intendencia de SanAndre's y Providencia, a first-order civil division of Colombia. In 1928 the United States and Colombia agreed to maintain the status quo in these islands; therefore, they are commonly designated on maps as "U.S. and Colombia." REFERENCES U.S. Bureau of the Census. Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1956, Seventy-seventh edition, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1956; list of territories and possessions of the United States, p. 7. Arango Cano, Jesus. Geo raffia Fisica y Economica de Colombia, Editorial Minerva, Ltda., Bogota, 1956; Colombian interpretation of administrative relationships. West IndiesT 1:3,500,0001 National Geographic Society, Washington, March 19 locational reference only. - 31j - CARIBBEAN ISLANDS CLAIMED BY THE UNITED STATES AND COLOMBIA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO020000500044 -- Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 A, United States island possession in the western Caribbean comprising a group of cays, rocks, and reefs centered near 15?51?N-790461W, about midway between Jamaica and Cabo Gracias a Dios. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARK; The cays are normally uninhabited. Administrative responsibility rests technically with the U.S. Coast Guard. REFERENCE_ U.S.. Bureau of Census. Statistical Abstract of the United States~ 1 (Seventy-seventh edition)', U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1956; list of territories and possessions of the United States, p. West Indies, 1:3,500,000; National Geographic Society, Washington, March .195+; locational reference only. -.35 - SERRANILLA BANK Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 SWAN ISLANDS Island possessions of the United States in the Caribbean comprising Great Swan Island .and..Little.Swan Island at 17o25tN-83o56tW. The total land area..is slightly more than a. square mile. Nameand number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS Name and. number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIQNS RE The population of the islands, about 35 in 1950, is not large enough to.require civil divisions. Technical administrative responsibility for the islands rests with the U.S. Department of State. A weather station and radio beacon are maintained on. Great Swan Island. REFERENCES U.S.. Bureau of Census. Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1956 (Seventy-seventh edition), U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1956;, list of territories and possessions of the United States, pe 7. West Indies, 1.3,500,000; National Geographic Society, Washington,.March.l951-; locational reference only. - 36 - SWAN ISLANDS Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 6 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS (province) municipio: 126 195+ (municipality) REMARKS Islands off the coast of the main island are administered as components of the provinces t}ey adjoin. The municipios are basically similar to those of numerous other Latin American countries in that most of them include a seat (city or town) and considerable surrounding territory. Nearly all cities and important. towns are municipio seats, but apparently none, with the possible exception of Havana, have a corporate or chartered identity apart from their respective municipiosd Thus, city government is municipio government. The.Havana metropolitan-area includes 2 municipios (l of which is named Havana and parts of 2 others. Havana was chartered as a ciudad (city) during the Spanish era and apparently retains some special prerogatives. REFERENCES The basic third-order unit into which municipios are divided is the barrio (borough or district), of which there are some 1;170- A portion of Guantanamo Bay, including its shore and various islands, is leased indefinitely by Cuba to the United States for use as a naval base. The base area forms an enclave within the Municipio de Guantanamo, and is outside Cuban civil adminis- tration. Cuba, Direccion General de Estadfstica. Clave Numerica de la Division Politica de Territorio Nacional,'1950, names of units first- through third-order in hierarchic outline. Call No. gC1+21. C82 . Ma-pa General de la Division Politica y Judicial en la.Republica de Cuba; 1:500,000; Cuba, Estado Major General del Ejercito, Seccio de Ingenierca, 1950; names.and boundaries of provincias and municip ioa. U.S. Department of State. Itoreign_Service despatch 980, Havana, 9 February 1954, Preliminary Findings of the, 1953 Cuban Census; administrative relationships. 37 - CUBA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 BAHAMAS (United Kingdom Crown Colony) The colony comprises an archipelago of islands, cays, and rocks,lying off the coast of Florida between 20050' and 27?25'N, and between 72?37' and 80032'W.* Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS district: 21 Name and number of SECOND-QRDER DIVISIONS REMARKS The districts are headed by district commissioners. Most of them comprise a major island and a number of adjacent islands, islets, and cays. Some of the less populous units are apparently combined to form special districts for particular purposes, for example, elections. New ;providence District, although not large, is the most important since it contains Nassau, the capital and chief port, and more than one-fourth of the total population of the colony. REFERENCES Colonial Reports: Bahamas 125+ and 1955,.Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1957; administrative relationships; includes 1:2,300,000 map on which the approximate limits of the districts can be worked out from the text. Colonial Office List, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1951; administrative relationships; names of districts. . *The Turks and Caicos Islands, though geographically within the Bahamas, are dependencies of Jamaica and are discussed separately under the Federation of the West Indies, p. 28. - 38 - BAHAMAS Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 NAVASSA ISLAND. A United States island possession in the Caribbean between Jamaica and Haiti, at l8?251N-75?02'W. Name and number of FIRST-LEDER DIVISIONS Name and number-of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS NS The island is normally inhabited only by a lighthouse maintenance staff and thus requires no civil divisions. Administrative responsibility rests with the U.S. Coast-Guard. REMENCES U.S. Bureau of the Census. Statistical Abstract of the United States 1956 (Seventy-seventh edition), U.8, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1956; list of territories and possessions of the-United States, p. 7., Platt, Raye R.. "A Note on Political.-Sovereignty and Administration in the Caribbean,"'The Geographical Review, Vol-,XVI, 1926, American Geographical Society, New York, background.data on United States acquisition of Navassa Island, p. 637.. West Indies, 1:3,500,000;. National Geographic Society, Washington, March 1954; locational reference only. -. 39 - NAVASSA ISLAND Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved, For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 HAITI Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departement: 5 195+ (department) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS arrondissement: 27 195+ REMARKS Coastal islands are administrative components of the departements and arrondissements they adjoin. Ile de la Gonave belongs to the Arrondissement de Port-au-Prince. Although they are used to some extent as statistical units, the departements are of little administrative importance. Arron- dissements, each in charge of a prefect appointed by the president, are the principal units of local administration. The basic third-order division is the commune, of which there are more than 100. In theory, city government is commune government. Since most important towns are the administrative seats of arron- dissements, however, the line between city or town government and arrondissement government is not always sharply drawn. Port-au- Prince, the capital, is a commune and,. technically, has no special status. REFERENCES Recensement General de la Republique d'Haiti, Haiti, Departement de L'Economie Nationale, Bureau de Recensement, Port-au-Prince, 1950; names of units in hierarchic outline, first- through third-order.. Call No. gC423.H2. Civil Division Base Map of the Americas. Mexico, Central . America, and the West Indies; 1:5,000,000; American Geographical Society; 197-4; boundaries of first- and second-order units (short one arrondissement for Departement de L'O.uest, otherwise data are current). Macdonald, Austin.F.. Latin American Politics and Government, Thomas Y. Crowell Company, New York, 195; administrative relationships. - 40 - HAITI Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 22 (province) 19 5 5 distrito: 1 (district) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS comun: 69 (commune) capital: 1 seccion municipal: 56 (municipal section) REMARKS Provincias include from 2 to 6 comunes. The comunes are somewhat similar to the municipios of numerous other Latin American countries in that they include an administrative seat (city, town, or village) and a surrounding rural area. Some comunes have as subdivisions of third-order rank one or more distritos municipales. These units are, in effect, embryo comunes. The Distrito de Santo Domingo, the 1 distrito of first-order status, comprises the capital, Ciudad Trujillo, and 56 secciones municipales. The latter may not be administrative entities in a strict sense, since many have only a few hundred inhabitants. All of the secciones municipales are outside the limits of Ciudad Trujillo. REFERENCES Poblacion de la Republica Dominicana: Censada en 1950, Dominican Republic,.Direcci6n General de Estad stica, Oficina Nacional del Censo, Session de Publicaciones, Ciudad Trujillo, 1951+; names of all units first- through third-order in hierarchic outline. Call No. gCl+22. D6k5 . Mapa de la Republica Dominicana con la Division Polftica; 1:500,000; Dominican Republic, Instituto Geografico Militar, 1955; names and boundaries of first- and second-order units, except the secciones municipales. Call No. 50007. Distrito de Santo Domingo; 1:100,000; Dominican Republic, Instituto Geografico Militar, 1955; names and boundaries of the secciones municipales. Call No. 50011. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 .A Commonwealth, associated with the United States, comprising the island of Puerto Rico, smallest major island of the Greater Antilles; various islets near the coast; and several larger. outlying islands, including . Mona,. Vieques, and Culebra. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS municipio: 77 (municipality) 1954 Name and number of SECOND-ORDERDIVISIONS barrio: ca. 550 (borough or quarter) Executive liaison with the United States Government functions through the U.S. Department of the Interior, whereas legislative liaison is effected through.the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico in Washington. The Resident Commissioner is a member of the United States House of Representatives, but does not vote. The municipios are basically similar to those of numerous other Latin American countries in that each is.comprised of a seat (city or town) and a surrounding rural area. The municipio seat has. no corporate identity apart from the municipio as,a whole; thus, city government is municipio government. .San.Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico, forms a municipio, but otherwise has no special status. Two.of the outlying islands, Vieques and Culebra, are municipios in their own right. The third outlying island of substantial size,. Mona, which is virtually uninhabited, is apparently administered directly by the Commonwealth. Government. The barrios, are minor subdivisions of the municipios and are of slight administrative importance. Puerto Rico is also divided into 7 distritos senatoriales (senatorial districts) that are sometimes treated as first- order civil divisions. Although these units are election districts and are used to some extent as statistical divisions, they are not administrative entities in, a strict sense. REFERENCES Puerto Rico, 1:250,000, U.S. Army Map Service, August 1954; names and boundaries of municiios and distritos s`enatoriales. ANTS E331. Pico, Rafael. The - Geographic Re ions of Puerto Rico,, University of-Puerto Rico Press, Rio Piedras) P.R., 1950; administrative relationships; names ofmuniciepios. Jones, C.F. and Pico, R.. Symposium on the Geo a hey of Puerto Rico,. University of-Puerto Rico Press, Rio Piedras, PQR.,. 1955; includes small-scale maps showing municipio boundaries for Puerto Rico as a whole.; barrio boundaries are portrayed for a few areas (incomplete coverage). - 42 m PUERTO RICO Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For. Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 VIRGIN ISLANDS OF THE UNITED STATES A. group of some 50 islands and cays, centered at approximately 18900'N- 61-?59'W, about 11.0 miles.east of Puerto.Rico. Name and number of FIRST-ORIlER DIVISIONS municipality: 2 1951 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS city: 3 1951 quarter: 22 The Virgin Islands of the United-States are comprised of three major islands: St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John. The latter two, along with smaller adjoining islands and nays, form the Municipality of St. Thomas and St. John The Municipality 'of St. Croix includes . t.. Croix Island and a few small adjoining islands. The legislative bodies of the 2 municipalities are ca.led Municipal Councils. When the councils meet jointly, they become the Legislative Assembly of the Virgin Islands with power to enact laws applicable to the islands as a whole. The Governor, who normally resides.at Charlotte Amalie on St. Thomas, mb,y app?oint administrative assistants'Vas his representatives on St...Croix and on.St. John. The 3 cities are Frederiksted, Christiansted, and Charlotte.Ama:l.ie. Of the 22 quarters (essentially rural districts), 13 are in the Municipality of-13t. Thomas and Ste John; and the remaining 9 are in.St. Croix Municipality. Whether it is proper in a strict sense to regard the cities.and quarters as governmental entities is a moot question. These units, however, are used for statistical purposes. FERENCES U.S. Bureau of the Census. U.S. Census of Po ulation l 111 Vol. 1, Number of Inhabitants,, Chapter 5 : erican Samoa, Canal Zone, Guam, and Virgin Islands of the U.S.", U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1951; administrative relationships; number of units and their names; boundaries shown on accompanying map at 1:225,000. Murray, Stuart. The VVir in Islands,, D.ueli loan and Pearce, Inc., New York, 1971; administrative relationships. - 43 VIRGIN ISLANDS OF THE UNITED.STATES Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS (United Kingdom Crown Colony) The British Virgin Islands are a group of small islands centered near l8?30'Nm61+?30'W, some 60 miles east of Puerto Rico. Name and number of FIRST-QRDER: DIVISIONS Name and number of SECOND:-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS Formerly a.Presidency of the Leeward Islands Colony, the British Virgin Islands became a separate colony in July 1956 when the Leeward Islands Colony was defederated in preparation for the formation of the Federation of the West Indies. As far as can be determined, the islands have no civil divisions other than the island pattern itself...Excluding rocks and reefs, the islands number 36, of which 12 are inhabited. Most of the 7,700 inhabitants of the colony live on Tortola Island. Road Town (population 1,200) on Tortola Island is the administrative seat. REFERENCE British Virgin Islands: Report for the Years 1955 and 1956, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 195b administrative relationships; includes a 1:250,000 location map.of the islands (no boundaries). 44 m BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 NETHERLANDS.ANTILLES The Netherlands. Antilles comprises two groups of Caribbean islands. The northern group includes Saba, 17?38'N-63?14'W; Sint Eustatius, 17?30'N-63?00'W; and part of Saint Martin (Dutch,?Sint Maarten; French, Saint-Martin)', l8?05'N- 63?05'W. The southern group includes Aruba, 12?301N-70?OO'W; Bonaire, 12?10'N- 68017'W; and Cura9ao, 12?10'N-69?00'W. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS [insular community]: 4 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS Three of the "insular communities" are coextensive with the islands of Aruba, Bonaire, and Curacao, respectively, and apparently do not have subdivisions of second-order rank. The fourth insular community comprises the three northern islands and has its administrative seat at Philipsburg, Sint Maarten. Each island of the northern group is in.a sense a second-order division, but whether it is now officially recognized as such cannot be determined from readily available sources. The government for the whole of Netherlands . Antilles, seated at Willemstad, Cura9ao, includes a legislature in which the northern islands are represented by only 1 member and the more populous southern islands by 21. Apparently, no cities have special status as first- or second-order civil divisions. REFERENCES The Statesman's Yearbook,, Macmillan and Co. Ltd., London, 1957; administrative relationships. Netherlands Antilles; 1:250,000 and other scales; 1953; locates the islands and their administrative seats; shows the boundary between the Dutch and French portions of Saint Martin. Map No. 12212. 1. Only the southern part of Saint Martin belongs to the Netherlands, the northern part belongs to France. - 1+5 - NETHERLANDS ANTILLES Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 The above data reflect the official status of Guadeloupe as an overseas departement of France. A more realistic interpretation would be: Guadeloupe comprises two large adjacent islands, Basse-Terre and Grande-Terre, in the Lesser Antilles centered near 16015'N-61035'W, and the smaller islands of Les Saintes,Marie-Galante, Petite Terre, and Desirade. Also part of Guadeloupe for administrative purposes are various islands some 150 miles northwest of Basse- Terre and Grande-Terre. These include the French portion of Saint-Martin (18?05'N- 63?05'W), Saint-Barthelemy (17?54'N-62?52'W)1 . and various islets near both. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departement: 1 1957 GUADELOUPE (French Overseas Department) (department) Name and number of SECQND-ORDER DIVISIONS arrondissement: 2 1957 First-order arrondissement . . . . 2 Second-order commune . . . . . . 34 Guadeloupe is also divided into 36 cantons, the functions of which are obscure. In various lists the cantons are set forth as administrative divisions superior in rank to communes. Actually, however, they seem to be merely election. districts without governments. The basic canton-commune relationship is 1-1, but exceptions are numerous. In 6 cases, a single canton is coextensive with 2 communes; and in 5 cases, a commune is coextensive with 2 cantons. In 1 instance, a commune (Pointe-a- Pitre) corresponds in area to 4 cantons. Each commune is comprised of a seat (city, town, or village) and an adjacent rural area. Since the seat has no corporate existence apart from the commune as a whole, city government is commune government. The smaller islands attached to Guadeloupe for administrative purposes fit into the arrondissement-canton-commune pattern applicable to Guadeloupe proper. For example, the French portion of Saint-Martin forms a canton coextensive with a single commune, and is administered as part of the Arrond- issement de la Basse-Terre; this is also true of Saint- Barthelemy. At least until 1954, Guadeloupe was divided into 11 cantons. The date of the change to 36 is not known. - 46 - GUADELQIJ E Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 GUADEWWE con.'t (a.) Bottin..de _ daga$car ties Territoires D'1 mex`ique.et '.c6 nie,.. Midot-Bot in,,.Paris, 19'57 administrativ: relationships; names of all units through the commune level (text is current but accompanying.,map is.not). . (b) Carte_ de, la Guadelo e. et DU endances 1:100 ,000; M.R. Clairon,.i,ibxarie de L' seignement, Basse--Terre; 1951-7'; commune names-and boundaries; map is out-of-date on.details but with tTxt of Ref. (a) the current picture can be worked out. Call No . 7125 4. - 1.7- Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-,1 MARTINIQUE (French Overseas Department) Martinique is a large island in the Lesser Antilles, near 1J4,040`N-6IOQ0 Wo Namo and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISION$departemente (department) 195'7 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS arrondissement 1957 REMARKS The data above reflect the status of Martinique as an overseas de ap ltement of France. A more realistic interpretation would be- First-order commune a o 0 84 Seeped-order none REEERENCES The island is.also divided into 36 cantons, the functions of which are somewhat obscure. In various lists the cantons are set forth as civil divisions superior in rank to the communes Actually, however, they seem to be merely election districts {without governments) from which single members are elected to the general council, the main legislative body of Martinique The commune of Fort-de=France is divided into 4 cantons and the Canton de Case-Pilote takes in 2 communes o Elsewhere, the canton-commune relationship is lmla Each commune comprises a seat (city, town, or village) and an adjacent rural area. Since the seat has no.corporate existence apart from the commune as a whole, city, government, and commune government areone and the same thing. At least until 1954, Martinique was divided into 2 arrondissements, 8 cantons, and, as at present, 34 communes, The date of the change to the present arrangement is not known. (a) Boffin de Madagascar des 'Ierr?i+oi e WAmeri.= et D Oceanie, idot;~Botti.n, Paris, 1957, administrative relationships; names of all units through the commune level (text is current but accompanying map reflects the former system). (b) Carte 1 outiere et Touri,stigue de la Martinique.; 1:100,000; France, Institdut Geographique Nat:iona:l., 1951; commune names and boundaries, best used with text of ref ? . (a) 0 Call No. 77188 0 -, 48 MARTINIQUE Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 SOUTH AMERICA Colombia Venezuela British Guiana Surinam (Dutch Guiana) French Guiana Brazil Ecuador Peru Bolivia Paraguay Chile Argentina Uruguay South Atlantic Islands Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 COLOMBIA Includes San. Andres and ProvidenciaIslands in the Caribbean, some 400 miles northwest of Cartagena. Malpelo Island, in the Pacific near 4?QO'Ns90?301W, also belongs to Colombia. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS 1954-57 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: (department) intendencia: 4 (intendancy) comisarla: 5 (commissariat) territorio nacionale, 3 (national territory) [special capital district]: 1 1954-.56 municipio: ca. 820 (municipality) REMARKS The intendencias and comisarfas are sparsely settled areas governed more or less directly from Bogota. The Caribbean Islands of San Andres and Providencia.(near 13?19'N-81923'W)form an intedencia. Colombia apparently regards this unit as including various nearby banks, cays,. and islets, some of which are claimed by the United States. .(See Caribbean Islands Claimed by The United States and Colombia, p. 34). The 3 national territories (sometimes treated in Colombian sources as parts of departamentos despite their name) are: Agua de Dios,-, a relatively small leper colony about 50 miles southwest of Bogota; Contratacion, a leper colony about 125 miles northeast of. Bogota; and Territor.ioVasquez, an inaccessible area of some 2,500 square kilometers centered near 6000'N-74030'W. The "special capital district",. formed in December 1954, takes in the erstwhile Bogota Municipio and several municipios that formerly adjoined it. The subdivisions, if any,, of the district are not indicated in currently available sources. Each munioipio includes a seat (city, town, or village) and an adjacent area,,usually rural. The seat has no.corporate identity separate from that of the municipio as a whole. Thus, city or town government is municipio government. The number of municipios is subject.to constant change as units are combined or..divided. The third-order unit into which some municipios are subdivided is the corregimiento (mayorality; district of a corregidor). There were some 2,016 of these units in 1954. - 1+9 COLOMBIA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 COLOMBIA con't RE ENCES Division Polftico-Adninistrativa de Colombia, Departamento Administrativo Naciona1 de Estad stica, Imprenta National, Bogota, 1951-; names and designations. of all units; boundaries shown.on individual maps of. first-order divisions (mostly 12,000,,000-le3,O00x0OO); not completely current, but still best reference.available for municipio data. Call No. 9D:121-23 . c66. Colombia 1:2,5O0,,000; 1952 rev. 1958y names and boundaries of departamentos1.comisar{as, and intendencias. Map.No 11827,1. Readily available map coverage for.municipio boundaries is not up.to.date; boundary and other data are needed on the capital district formed in 1954. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Name and number of M&-2M DIVSEIE Nr5 196 Naive and number of SECOND-ORAER DIVISIONS 1952-56 eataddo % 20 .(state) diatrito federal 1 (federal district) territorio: .2 (territory) dependeneia-.federal (federal dependency) distrito: 158 (district) departamenta: 9 (department) MK'__ Caracas and a _rather extensive :area adjacent to it .form the distrito federal which is divided into 2 de artamentos d Libertador and Vargas. The 2 sparsely populated ter?ritorios are the Orinoco Delta and a marginal section of the:Amazon Basin; the former is divided into 3 depa,rtament.os,the.latter into 1. The denendenci.a federal includes most of the Venezuelan island possessions in the C bbean, but excludes Margarita and Coche, which collectively form a state. Some second-order distritos include little more than a tow and its environs, whereas others cover extensive areas. The main tia rd-order divisions of Venezuela.are the munici os (649 in 1952) and -parroguias (parishes), of which there were?22 in 1952. All of the pariehea are In the 2 departamentoo of the dists.itoo federal. In most instances, city government is.muniei io government, and the administrative seat (city, town, or village has no corporate identity apart from the municipio as a whole.. Semperio, Jose Vo Moa La .'oblation del Area Metro olitana de Ga,r , Corporation Venezol a de Fomento, Caracas, 195 names of first-order units,. boundaries shown on small-acale maps.. includes .1:200,000 map showing civil divisions (first- .through third-order) in the Caracas area. 'Call No gD]22.>C670 Parra', Juan T'. Atlas de Bolsillo de; Venezuela, . Litografia Miangolarra Hnos o olio, Caraca s, 1952; number of unit.a first- thr.?ou.gh third-order; limits. of fi.rat- and second-order divisions shown on small-scale maps. Call No. aD122.F6 1952. VENEZUELA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 BRITISH GUIANA (United Kingdom Grown Colony) Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS administrative district: 9 1956 SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS municipality: 2 1957 village: 16 country district: 48 REMARKS The 9 administrative districts are of 2 types: (a) relatively populous coastal districts administered by the Department.of Local Government, and (b) the sparsely settled interior districts administered by the Department of the Interior. Of the former, there are 6; of the latter, 3. The two municipalities (Georgetown, the capital, and New Amsterdam) are in the coastal districts, as are the organized villages and country districts. The three traditional provinces or counties (Berbice, Demerara, and Essequibo) have no current administrative significance, although they are still shown along with the contemporary first order administrative districts on official maps dated as late as 1955. The provinces were part of a territorial, arrangement that came into existence in the 18th Century and remained in effect until about 1830. REFERENCES British Guiana; 1:4,000,000; May 1958; names, boundaries,, and capitals of first-order districts. Map.No. 2655k. Report on British Guiana for the Year. 1957,x. Her Majesty?s Stationery Office, London, 1957; printed under the authority of the Government by Argosy Co., Ltd., Bel Air, East Demerara; names of first-order districts; administrative relationships; accompanying 1:2,200,,000 map shows first-order district boundaries. Colonial Retort: British Guiana 195k; Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London; 1955; administrative relationships; includes a 1:2,100,000 map showing boundaries of the provinces or counties. GAPS No readily available maps show village and country district boundaries. 52 - BRITISH GUIANA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 SURINAM (Dutch Guiana) A. Netherlands possession on the north coast of South America. Name and number of FIRST-QRDER DIVISIONS district: 1951 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS REMARKS The town of Paramaribo constitutes one of the 7 districten (districts).. In addition to being capital of Surinam, it is the administrative-seat for the large Suriname. District which surrounds it. The districten, including Paramaribo, are administered by commissioners.eppointed by the governor. A few. organized village communities are the only entities approaching the status of "second-order" administrative divisions. REFERENCES Overzichtskaart van Suriname; 1:800,000; compiled by F.E. Spiriet, former head of the Survey Service of Surinam., 1951, names and boundaries of first-order units. Call No. 77930. 't`e GuianaB 1:2,000,000; December 1952; names and boundaries of first-order units. Map.No. 122601.1. 53 - SURINAM Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 FRENCH GUIANA (French Overseas De'part'ment) The d partement includes the former colony of Guiana and the former penal colony. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departement: 1 (department) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS arrondissement: 2 REMARKS The breakdown above reflects the official status of the area.as one of the overseas departements of France. A more realistic interpretation might be: First-order arrondissement . . . . 2 Second-order (1957) . . 14 circonscription . . . 5 (circumscription) The Arrondissement de Cayenne, comprising the relatively populous coastal area, is divided into 15 cantons and 14 communes. In French sources, the cantons are treated as entities superior in rank to the communes. Actually, however, they seem to be mere election districts without a"general administrative role. The cantons, therefore, are ignored in the "realistic" appraisal set forth above. The basic canton-commune relationships is 1-1, but the town of Cayenne, a single commune, is divided into 4 cantons; and Canton de Remire-Matoury and Canton de Saint-Georges de 1'Oyapoc each include 2 communes. The sparsely settled interior (Arrondissement de l'Inini) is divided into 5 lightly controlled circonscritpions. As far as can be determined, they have no official subdivisions. REFERENCES Bottin de Madagascar des Territoires d'Amerigue et d'Oceanie, Didot-Bottin, Paris, 1957; administrative relationships; names of units; includes a 1:2,300,000 map on which arrondissement and circumscription boundaries'are shown. Resultats Statisti ues du Recensement General de la Population des I7epartements d'Outre-Mer 1954: Guyane, Imprimerie Nationale, Paris, 1957; administrative relationships;.names of some of the units. GAPS Apparently, there are no readily available maps showing current commune boundaries. - 54 - FRENCH GUIANA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release. 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS estado: 20 (state) .1957 territorio: 5 (territory) distrito federal: 1 (federal district) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS municfpio: 2,418 (municipality) 1957 circunscricao: 16 (circumscription) KS Four of the 5 territories are relatively inaccessible frontier areas;. the fifth comprises Fernando de Noronha Island (3?51'S- 32?25?W). The distrito federal includes the city of Rio de Janeiro and an adjacenarea. administrative purposes, it is subdivided into 16 circunscricoes, which rank technically as second-order units. REFERENCES The future capital of Brazil will be located in a distrito federal. constituting an enclave within Goias State. This area .now.falls within the limits of 5 or 6. munici ios and will, presumably, continue in this status until all or part of the federal government establishment is transferred from Rio de Janeiro, possibly in 1.960. Munic1pios are the basic units of local government. Some are divided into distritos (third-order units of which there were some 5,440 in-19-5-0-F, whereas.others are not. A.munici io comprises a seat and some additional territory, usually rural.. The administrative center is classified as a cidade (city) regardless of population, and it does not have a corporate existence separate from that of the munici io as a whole. Divis'go Territorial do Brasil, reprint from No. 35/36 "Revista Brasileira.de Municipios," Rio de Janeiro, 1957; names of munici-ios, alphabetically and in hierarchic outline. Smith, T. Lynn. Brazil: People and Institutions) . Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, 1954; administrative relationships. Code id (Map Supplement to the Epidemiological Cable Code); first edition, World Health Organization, Geneva, 1954; names and boundaries-of first- and second-order units (mianicl io data are not completely current). Call No. aA000-23.W -1951-. - 55 - BRAZIL Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 BRAZIL con't REFERENCES Rio de Janeiro en.Pocas Horas, Touring Club do Brasil, Rio de con't Janeiro, lq ; administrative divisions of the federal district. GAPS Readily available map coverage for municipio boundaries leaves much to be desired in recency and detail. - 56 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17: CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Includes the Galapagos Islands (Archipielago de Colon), approximately 1000?S-9l?00'W. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 18 (province) 1957 territorio insular: 1 (island territory) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS canton: 95 1957 (canton) ____KS_ The territorio insular comprises the Galapagos Islands of which 5.are inhabited and 15 are normally uninhabited. The 5 inhabited islands are in effect the subdivisions of the territory, Under the name Archipielago de Colon, these islands.are sometimes listed as an entity of canton rank, coextensive with the territorio insular, but are not counted officially (or above) as a canton. The basic third-order divisions are the parrogLuias urbanas (urban parishes) of which there are 165 and the parroqui.as rurales,. which number 609. These divisions are somewhat similar to the municipios of other Latin.American countries, except that the larger cities include several parishes instead of one. For example, Quito has 14 parroquias urbanas, and Riobamba )+. REFERENCES Division Politica Territorial de la Re ublica del Ecuador; 1:1,000,000; Instituto Ecuatoriano de -tropologla y Geograffa; 1957; names of units first- through third-order in hierarchic outline keyed to map by letter and number; map includes boundaries of 'all units except certain urban parishes that could not be represented at the scale. Call No. 103554. Mapa del Ecuador; 1:1;000,000; compiled by Capt. Francisco Sampedro V.; reproduced by U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1950; province boundaries; political data are not current but map is usgful in interpreting the'more recent one cited above. Call No- 71376. - 57 - ECUADOR Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 23 1957 Name.and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS 1957 (department) provincia constitutional: 1 (constitutional province) provincia: 141 (province) distrito: 3 (district) REMARK Departments and provinces in the trans-Andean interior are larger than those in the coastal and mountain belts. The provincia constitutional comprises Callao, the port of Lima,.-and a small surrounding area. It has had the status of a first-order civil division for over 100 years and is divided into 3 distritos that rank technically as second-order divisions. The basic third-order division, of which there were 1,428 in 1957, is also called a distrito. Lima, the capital, comprises 5 distritos urbanos units of a type not found elsewhere. At least four other categories of settlements (ciudad/city; pueblo/town; villa/village; caserio/small village) are recognized officially, but the division of authority, between city or town government and distrito government, if such exists, is not sharply drawn. Native (Indian) communities have special legal status and are, in general, outside the scope of the administrative arrangements applicable to the country as a whole. FERENCES. Asturrizaga, Juan E.. Geograffa dell Peru, D. Miranda, Lima, 1957; names of first- and second-order units; number of distritos. Revista GeoZrafica Peru, Asociacion de Geogr.?afos Egresados del Insti.tuto de Geografla de la Universidad National Mayor de San Marcos, Ano 1, No. 1, Lima, December 1956; names and capitals of units first- through third-order; boundaries of departments and provinces shown on 1:12,000,000 map -- names keyed to map by number; distrito data are not completely current. Peaslee, A. J.. Constitutions of Nations, Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 1.956; administrative relationships (constitution of? Peru, Vol. III, p. 132-.16o). 58 - Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 9 1956 delegacio'n: 5 (delegation) (department) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 93 1956 (province) REMARKS Administrators of the sparsely populated delegaciones are appointed by the president. They are responsible for re- settlement programs and the welfare of indigenous peoples in their areas. REFERENCES The delegaciones are outside the jurisdiction of departamentos, but the second-order entities that lie within them are nevertheless counted as provincias in Bolivian sources, and are included in the above total of 93. In general, the provincias are of little importance administratively, and only a few require a staff other than the part-time services of one official. Third-order administrative entities include municipios (cities, towns, and other settlements), of which there were some 200 in 1951, and cantones (rural districts) of which there were 821 in 1951. The more important cities have municipal councils presided over by an alcalde (mayor). Since most of these communities are also the administrative seats of departamentos, however, the line between city government and departamento government is not sharply drawn. Sucre, the legal capital, and La Paz, the actual seat of the national government, have no status that is basically different from that of other cities. Numerous Indian communities are organized in traditional clans controlled by headmen. Although these groups enjoy no official recognition as governmental entities, their influence is quite strong. Reyes, J.M.. Bosquejo de Geo raffia de Bolivia, Instituto Pan-Americano de Geografia e Historia, Comissao de Geografia, Publi9ao No. 213 (199-IV), Rio de Janeiro, 1956; number of units; names of departamentos; administrative relationships. Osborne, Harold. Bolivia: A Divided Land, Royal Institute of International Affairs, London, 1954; administrative relation- ships. Report of the United Nations Mission of Technical Assistance to Bolivia, United Nations, New York, 1951; administrative relationships. 59 - BOLIVIA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 BOLIVIA contt REFERENCES Carta.Censal de la Republica de Bolivia, Direccion General con't de Estadistica y Censos, ca. 1947-5.; departamento and provincia names and boundaries; coverage by departamentos as follows : Chuquisaca 1:500,000. Call No. 76647 Cochabamba 1:500,000 ,i it 76375 El Beni 1:1,000,000 ii 76362 La Paz 1:500,000 n it 76372 Oruro 1:500,000 ii 76393 Pando 1:800,000 ii ii 76299 Potosf 1:1,000,000 ii 76628 Santa Cruz 1:250,000 ii i' 76380 Tarija 1:250,000 +r 76649 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 16 (department) 1957 distrito federal: 1 (federal district) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS distrito: 154+ (district) 1951-57 parroquia: 6 (parish) REMARKS The sparsely settled area west of the Rio Paraguay, referred to as the Occidental, includes 3 departamentos that are under the Ministry of National Defense; whereas the 13 departamentos of the Oriental, the area east of the Rio Paraguay, are administered by the Department of the Interior. The distrito federal includes Asuncion and its immediate environs. The - p~.arroquias parishes) into which it is divided rank technically as second-order units. In addition to being the national capital, Asuncion is also the administrative seat for Central, the departamento immediately south of the distrito federal. Outside Asuncion, city government is distrito government, the distritos of Paraguay being basically similar to the municipios of numerous Latin American countries. Each distrito comprises a seat (city, town, or village) and a surrounding area, usually rural. The town that serves as the administrative center has no corporate existence apart from the distrito as a whole. REFERENCES Capurro, Adan. Geografia del Paraguay, "Alcora", Asuncion, 1957; administrative relationships; names of departamentos, parroquias, and most distritos. Mapa de la Repsblica del Paraguay; 1:1,000,000; Estado Mayor General, Seccion Cartografica, 1956; names and boundaries of first-order units. Call No. 10235+. [Districts and Colonies in the Departments of Paraguay]; various scales, mostly 1:25,000-1:200,000; Paraguay, Direction General de Estadfstica y Censos; 1956; names and boundaries of distritos; ca. 150 sheets covering 145 of the distritos. Call '507.7-107-1-37. Geographic Intelligence Report, Administrative Divisions of Western Hemisphere Countries, RR-G-3, 1 November 1952; administrative relationships; names of first-order units with number of distritos indicated for each. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 CHILE* Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 25 (province) 1956 Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 87 (department) 195+ REMARKS A single departamento is coextensive with Aisan province. The Juan Fernandez Islands are administrative components of Valparaiso Province, whereas the normally uninhabited islands of San Felix and San Ambrosio near 26?00?S-80?OO1W belong to Atacama Province. Each province is under the authority of an intendente and each departamento is under a governor. The intendente, however, also serves as governor of the departamento containing the provincial capital. Departamentos are subdivided into comunas (communes, third-order divisions) and comunas into distritos (districts, fourth-order). City government is commune government and, apparently, no towns have special status as first- or second-order units. The city of Santiago, capital of Chile, fallswithin the Comuna de Santiago and is divided into 52 fourth-order distritos. REFERENCES Chile; 1:5,000,000; 195+; province names and boundaries. Map No . 12872 . Mapa.Escolar de Chile; 1:3,000,000; 195)+-?; provincia and departamento names and boundaries. Call No. 779+9? XII Censo-General dePoblacion, Escrutinio Preliminar, 'Provincia de Santiaga,' Direction General de Estadistica, Secretaria General del Censo, Chile, Santiago, 1952; names and boundaries of all units first- through fourth-order for Santiago Province. Similar publications are available for all provinces. Butland, G.J.. Chide, Royal Institute of International Affairs, London, 1953; administrative relationships. *Easter and Sala y Gomez islands, Chilean possessions in the eastern Pacific, are treated in Part IV, Oceania. Chilean and other Antarctic claims are not considered in this report. Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000060004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS provincia: 22 1957 (province) capital federal: 1 territorio nacional: 1 (national territory) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 352 195+-57 (department) partido: 112 (district) barrio: 45 (borough) section islas: 1 (islands section) REMARKS Several of the current provinces did not achieve provincial status until the period 1951-55 during which numerous territorios were raised in rank. The- capital federal includes only the central core of the Buenos .Aires metropolitan area. It is subdivided in a number of different ways for different purposes (police, taxation, elections, etc.). Apparently, however, the barrios are the most important of the numerous divisions. The territorio nacional carries the official title "Territorio Nacional de Tierra del Fuego, Antartida e Islas del,Atlantico Sur." It is divided into 4 departamentos, all of which fall within Tierra del Fuego and nearby islands. The departamentos and partidos are the basic second-order divisions. There is no functional difference between them; the name partido is used in Buenos Aires Province and departamento elsewhere. Some of the departamentos and partidos are similar to the municipios (a seat -- city,.town, or village nd an adjacent area, usually rural) found elsewhere in.Latin erica, whereas others are larger and more populous. Most important cities and towns are the seats of departamentos or partidos and there are indications that in some cases at least city government and de2artamento or arp tido government are one and the same thing, but whether this holds true for all of Argentina is not made clear by readily available data. The section islas is in Buenos Aires Province. Not assigned to any pare Lido, it comprises a group of almost uninhabited fluvial islands near the confluence of the Parana and Uruguay rivers. *Argentina is here considered without regard to Antarctic claims. For the Falkland. Islands and other islands claimed by the United Kingdom and Argentina, see South Atlantic Islands, p. 66. - 63 - ARGENTINA Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 ARGENTINA con?t REFERENCES Republica Argentina; 1:2,500,000; Ejercito Argentine, Instituto Geografico Militar, 1957; names and boundaries of first-order units. Call No. 101+78. [Province Map Indexesl, Editorial Mapa, Buenos.Aires, 1957; names of departamentos. Catamarca Call No. 102189 (Map Supplement) Corrientes Formosa It It 102190 " 102191 it it, Jujuy " 102192 La Rioja " 102193 Mendoza 102194 San Juan 102195 San Luis " 102196 Santiago del Estero " 102197 Tucuman " 102198 Entre Rios It 102350 Almanague Peuser del Mensajero, Peuser, Buenos Aires, 1956; names of departamentos and partidos. Call No. D501.Al. Atlas de la Republica Argentina, Ejercito Argentine, Instituto Geografico Militar, 1954; political data are not completely current, but mostdepartamento and partido boundaries are correctly shown on province maps at 1:1,500,000. Call No. aD50l.A62. Manual de los k Barrios de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Fiol and Menendez, Buenos Aires, 1956; names. and boundaries of the divisions of Buenos Aires. Call No. aD501.9.B856 1956. - 64 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS departamento: 19 (department) Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS See Remarks REMARKS The Departamento de Montevideo, the smallest but most populous of the first-order units, takes in little more than the city of Montevideo, capital of Uruguay, and its environs. The government of the departamento and the government of the city are one and the same thing.. Throughout Uruguay, nearly all important towns and cities are departamento capitals and, as such, are administered. directly by departamento governments. Towns other than the capitals of departamentos may organize local councils and, under certain conditions, council powers may be broadened; particularly where the town has more than 10,000 inhabitants or is of "special national interest for the development of tourist travel." Towns with local councils -- their number is unknown -- are apparently the only true second-order administrative divisions. Uruguay is divided into some 230 secciones policiales (police sections) -- sometimes called secciones judiciales -- which may be used as statistical units where geographic areas smaller than departamentos are required. These jurisdictions, however, are not true administrative entities. REFERENCES Uruguay; 1:1,500,000; 19+7; names and boundaries of departamentos (data are current). Map No. 10714.1. Ma pa del Uruguay con la Delimitacion A roximada de las Secciones Policiales; ca. 1:1,500,000; R. Cossani, 1949; boundaries of departamentos and secciones policiales. Call No. 65656. Peaslee, A.J.. Constitutions of Nations, 2nd ed., Vol III, Martinus Nijhoff, the Hague, 1956; administrative relationships (Uruguay constitution, p. 608). Macdonald, A.F.. Latin American Politics and Government, Thomas Y. Crowell, New York, 1954; administrative relationships. - 65 - URUGUAY Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2.000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 SOUTH ATLANTIC ISLANDS In this category are the Falkland Islands (near 52000'S-59000'W), South Georgia Island (51+?30'S-37?00'W), and the South Sandwich Islands (centered near 58?00'S- 27000'41), all of which are now administered by the United Kingdom but are also claimed by Argentina. Antarctic claims are not here considered. Name and number of FIRST-ORDER DIVISIONS See Remarks Name and number of SECOND-ORDER DIVISIONS The United Kingdom administers the Falkland Islands as.a.crown colony and considers South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands to be parts of the "Falkland Islands-Dependencies." The Falkland Islands, with a population of approximately 2,230, do not require civil divisions as such. About half the people living in the islands reside in Port Stanley, which has a town council and is the only "local government area." The United Kingdom maintains an Administrative Officer on South Georgia Island, but there are no civil divisions-and no settlements other than whaling stations. The population is about 250 through- out the year and 700 during the whaling season. The South Sandwich Islands,are normally uninhabited. Argentina regards, the Falklands. along with South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands as parts of her "Territorio National de Tierra del Fuego,.Antartida e Islas del Atlantico Sur.'t However, no resident Argentine officials are currently exercising adminis- trative authority on any of the islands. FEfiFNCES Colonial Reports: Falkland Islands 1952 and 1223, Her Majesty's tationery Office, London, 1954; British interpretation of administrative relationships; includes 1:9,000,000 map of the "Falkland Islands and Dependencies" and a map of the Falklands indicating private ownership of islands and tracts. Republica A entina;, 1:2,500,000; Ejercito Argentino, Instituto Geografico Militar, 1957; Argentine interpretation of adminis- trative relationships. Call No. 101+78. - 66 - SOUTH ATLANTIC ISLANDS Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009AO02000050004-1 Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Approved For Release 2000/04/17 : CIA-RDP79-01009A002000050004-1