Préfecture
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Not to be confused with the English word, prefecture.
In France, a préfecture is the administrative town of a département. By extension, it is also the name of one of the governing bodies of the département, and of the building housing this government body.
A préfecture de région is the equivalent of the préfecture at the région level.
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[edit] Role of the préfecture in the département
There are 100 préfectures in France. The civil servant in charge is the préfet. The préfecture is an administration that belongs to the Interior ministry, and is therefore in charge of the delivery of the identity card, driving licenses, passports, residence and work permits for foreigners, car registration, registration of the associations (creation, status modification, dissolution), and of the management of the police and of the firefighters.
The prefect represents the national government locally and as such exercises locally the powers that are constitutionally or legally exercised by the national government. The préfet issue arrêtés, which are legal texts written for the application of the law, e.g. to close a building that does not conform to safety rules, or modify vehicular traffic regulations (speed limit, authorization for construction).
The governing body of the département is the Conseil Général, which is in charge of the building and maintenance of schools and roads, financial assistance to dependent people (disabled and elderly), and promotion of local, economic development, to name a few. In the past, the prefect was head of the département; since 1982, the president of the conseil général has been the chief executive of the department.
[edit] Paris
There is an exception with Paris (which is itself a département) and the three surrounding départements (called the petite couronne, small crown): those four départements are governed by a single préfecture for law enforcement and security purposes, which is the préfecture de police (PP). The préfet de police has the power of law enforcement for Paris, which is a power of the mayor for the other French cities and towns.
Until 1977, Paris had no mayor and was mostly ruled by the préfet de police (a situation inherited from the Paris Commune, 1871).
[edit] Divisions of the départements
The départements are divided into arrondissements, themselves divided into cantons. The capital city of an arrondissement is the sous-préfecture. The civil servant in charge is the sous-préfet. The capital city of a canton is a chef-lieu de canton. The cantons have little role except as electoral subdivision.
[edit] See also
Overseas Régions:
Cayenne (French Guiana) • Basse-Terre (Guadeloupe) • Fort-de-France (Martinique) • Saint-Denis (Réunion)
arrondissement · département · préfecture · sous-préfecture