List of districts of Serbia
Districts of Serbia Окрузи Србије Okruzi Srbije | |
---|---|
Also known as: Okrug | |
Districts of Serbia | |
Category | Unitary state |
Location | Republic of Serbia |
Created by | Government of Serbia Enactment of 29 January 1992 |
Created | 29 January 1992 |
Number |
29 districts 24 districts (de facto, excluding Kosovo[lower-alpha 1]) |
Populations | 91,754 (Toplica District) – 615 371 (South Bačka) |
Areas | 1,250 km2 (482 sq mi) (Podunavlje) – 6,100 km2 (2,370 sq mi) (Zlatibor) |
Government | National government |
Subdivisions | Municipalities |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Serbia |
Legislature |
Judiciary |
The districts of Serbia (Serbian: Окрузи Србије / Okruzi Srbije), officially called administrative districts (управни окрузи, upravni okruzi) are the first level administrative subdivisions of the country.
Districts are the administrative units of Serbia, comprising several municipalities and cities each. They are defined by the Government of Serbia's Enactment of 29 January 1992. Districts are regional centers of state authority and they do not have any form of self-government. They run affairs in the name of the Government.
There are 29 districts in Serbia (7 in Vojvodina, 8 in Šumadija and Western Serbia, 9 in Southern and Eastern Serbia and 5 in Kosovo and Metohija[a]). The only part of Serbia that is not part of any district is the territory of the City of Belgrade which has a special status, very similar to that of a district. Every districts has its seat in the largest city of the district.
Term
The Slavic word okrug (округ) denotes administrative subdivision in some states. Its etymology is similar to the German Kreis, circle (in the meaning of administrative division) (although translated in German as Bezirk): okrug is literally something "encircling". In the subdivisions of Serbia, the term is translated as district, sometimes as county.
Definition
The territorial organisation of Serbia is regulated by the Law on Territorial Organization, adopted by the National Assembly on 29 December 2007.[1] According to the Law, the territorial organization of the republic comprises municipalities and cities, the City of Belgrade with special status, and autonomous provinces. Districts are not mentioned in this law but are defined by the Government of Serbia's Enactment of 29 January 1992. They are defined as the districts as "regional centers of state authority", enacting affairs run by the relevant Ministries.
Serbia is divided into 29 districts (8 in Šumadija and Western Serbia, 9 in Southern and Eastern Serbia, 7 in Vojvodina and 5 in Kosovo and Metohija), plus the City of Belgrade.[2] The City of Belgrade is not part of any district, but has a special status very similar to that of a district.
Districts of Kosovo
Serbian laws treat Kosovo and Metohija as integral part of Serbia (Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija). The Enactment defines five districts on the territory of Kosovo.[1] But, since 1999, following the Kosovo War Kosovo is under United Nations' administration of UNMIK. In 2000, the UNMIK administration changed territorial organisation on the territory of Kosovo. All five districts were abolished, and seven new districts were created. Serbian government does not recognize this move, and accepts only five pre-2000 districts.
List of districts
Districts in Šumadija and Western Serbia
District | Seat | Area in km² | Population 2011 | Population per km² | Municipalities and cities | Settlements |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kolubara District (Kolubarski okrug) |
Valjevo | 2,474 | 174,228 | 70.4 | 218 | |
Mačva District (Mačvanski okrug) |
Šabac | 3,268 | 297,778 | 91.1 | 228 | |
Moravica District (Moravički okrug) |
Čačak | 3,016 | 212,149 | 70.3 | 206 | |
Pomoravlje District (Pomoravski okrug) |
Jagodina | 2,614 | 212,839 | 84.8 | 191 | |
Rasina District (Rasinski okrug) |
Kruševac | 2,667 | 240,463 | 90.2 | 296 | |
Raška District (Raški okrug) |
Kraljevo | 3,918 | 300,102 | 76.6 | 359 | |
Šumadija District (Šumadijski okrug) |
Kragujevac | 2,387 | 290,900 | 121.8 | 174 | |
Zlatibor District (Zlatiborski okrug) |
Užice | 6,140 | 284,729 | 46.4 | 438 |
Districts in Southern and Eastern Serbia
District | Seat | Area in km² | Population 2011 | Population per km² | Municipalities and cities | Settlements |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bor District (Borski okrug) |
Bor | 3,507 | 123,848 | 35.3 | 90 | |
Braničevo District (Braničevski okrug) |
Požarevac | 3,865 | 180,480 | 46.7 | 189 | |
Jablanica District (Jablanički okrug) |
Leskovac | 2,769 | 215,463 | 77.8 | 336 | |
Nišava District (Nišavski okrug) |
Niš | 2,729 | 373,404 | 136.8 | 285 | |
Pčinja District (Pčinjski okrug) |
Vranje | 3,520 | 158,717 | 45.1 | 363 | |
Pirot District (Pirotski okrug) |
Pirot | 2,761 | 92,277 | 33.4 | 214 | |
Podunavlje District (Podunavski okrug) |
Smederevo | 1,248 | 198,184 | 158.8 | 58 | |
Toplica District (Toplički okrug) |
Prokuplje | 2,231 | 90,600 | 40.6 | 267 | |
Zaječar District (Zaječarski okrug) |
Zaječar | 3,623 | 118,295 | 32.6 | 173 |
Districts in Vojvodina
District | Seat | Area in km² | Population 2011 | Population per km² | Municipalities and cities | Settlements |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Central Banat District (Srednjebanatski okrug) |
Zrenjanin | 3,256 | 186,851 | 57.4 | 55 | |
North Bačka District (Severnobački okrug) |
Subotica | 1,784 | 185,552 | 104.0 | 45 | |
North Banat District (Severnobanatski okrug) |
Kikinda | 2,329 | 146,690 | 63.0 | 50 | |
South Bačka District (Južnobački okrug) |
Novi Sad | 4,016 | 615,371 | 151.3 | 77 | |
South Banat District (Južnobanatski okrug) |
Pančevo | 4,245 | 291,327 | 68.6 | 94 | |
Srem District (Sremski okrug) |
Sremska Mitrovica | 3,486 | 311,053 | 89.2 | 109 | |
West Bačka District (Zapadnobački okrug) |
Sombor | 2,420 | 187,581 | 77.5 | 37 |
Districts in Kosovo and Metohija
Five of Serbian Districts are on the territory of Kosovo, comprising 28 municipalities and 1 city. In 2000, UNMIK created 7 new districts and 30 municipalities. Serbia does not exercise sovereignty over this polity. For the UNMIK districts and the districts of Kosovo, see Districts of Kosovo. Because the Serbian government has no control over Kosovo since it declared independence, it was not included in Serbia's 2011 census. For current demographic information about Kosovo, see Kosovo's 2011 census.
District | Seat | Area in km² | Population 2002 | Population per km² | Municipalities and cities |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kosovo District (Kosovski okrug) |
Pristina | 3,310 | 672,292 | 203.1 | |
Kosovo-Pomoravlje District (Kosovsko-Pomoravski okrug) |
Gnjilane | 1,389 | 217,726 | 156.8 | |
Kosovska Mitrovica District (Kosovskomitrovički okrug) |
Kosovska Mitrovica | 2,053 | 275,904 | 134.4 | |
Peć District (Pećki okrug) |
Peć | 2,459 | 414,187 | 168.4 | |
Prizren District (Prizrenski okrug) |
Prizren | 2,196 | 376,085 | 171.3 |
See also
- Administrative divisions of Serbia
- Municipalities and cities of Serbia
- Cities and towns of Serbia
- Populated places of Serbia
- ISO 3166-2:RS
Notes and references
Notes
- ↑ Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Kosovo and the Republic of Serbia. The Republic of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. The two governments began to normalise relations in 2013, as part of the Brussels Agreement. Kosovo has received formal recognition as an independent state from 111 out of 193 United Nations member states.
References
- 1 2 "Zakon o teritorijalnoj organizaciji Srbije" (in Serbian). Parliament of Serbia.
- ↑ "Facts about Serbia". Government of Serbia. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
External links
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