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Administrative divisions of Myanmar

Myanmar is divided into twenty-one administrative subdivisions, which include 7 regions, 7 states, 1 union territory, 1 self-administered division, and 5 self-administered zones. Following is the table of government subdivisions and its organizational structure based on different regions, states, the union territory, the self-administered division, and the self-administered zones:

Administrative divisions of Myanmar
Kachin StateMyitkyinaSagaingSagaingChin StateHakhaShan StateTaunggyiRakhine StateSittweMagway RegionMagweMandalay RegionMandalayKayah StateLoikawNaypyidaw Union TerritoryBago RegionBagoYangon RegionYangonAyeyarwady RegionPatheinKayin StatePaanMawlamyaingMon StateDaweiTanintharyi Region
A clickable map of Burma/Myanmar exhibiting its first-level administrative divisions.
CategoryUnitary state
LocationMyanmar
Number7 regions, 7 states, 1 union territory, 1 self-administered division, and 5 self-administered zones (as of 2015)
Populations286,627 (Kayah State) - 7,360,703 (Yangon Region)
Areas7,054 km2 (2,724 sq mi) (Naypyidaw Union Territory) - 155,801 km2 (60,155 sq mi) (Shan State)
Government
Subdivisions
Type Burmese name No. of div.
Region တိုင်းဒေသကြီး
tuing:desa.kri:
IPA: [táɪɰ̃ dèθa̰ dʑí]
taìñ deithác̱ì
7
State ပြည်နယ်
pranynai
IPA: [pjìnɛ̀]
pyine
7
Union Territory ပြည်ထောင်စုနယ်မြေ
pranytaungcu.nai-mre
IPA: [pjìdàʊɰ̃zṵnɛ̀mjè]
pyiṯauñs̱únemyei
1
Self-Administered
Division
ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရ တိုင်း
kuiypuing-uphkyuphkwang.ra.tuing:
IPA: [kòbàɪɰ̃ ʔoʊʔtɕʰoʊʔ kʰwɪ̰ɰ̃ja̰ táɪɰ̃]
koup̱aiñ ouʔhcouʔ hkwíñyá taìñ
1
Self-Administered
Zone
ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ
kuiypuing-uphkyuphkwang.ra.desa.
IPA: [kòbàɪɰ̃ ʔoʊʔtɕʰoʊʔ kʰwɪ̰ɰ̃ja̰ dèθa̰]
koup̱aiñ ouʔhcouʔ hkwíñyá deithá
5

The regions were called divisions prior to August 2010,[1] and four of them are named after their capital city, the exceptions being Sagaing Region, Ayeyarwady Region and Tanintharyi Region. The regions can be described as ethnically predominantly Burman (Bamar), while the states, the zones and Wa Division are dominated by ethnic minorities.

Yangon Region has the largest population and is the most densely populated. The smallest population is Kayah State. In terms of land area, Shan State is the largest and Naypyidaw Union Territory is the smallest.

Regions and states are divided into districts (ခရိုင်; kha yaing or khayaing, IPA: [kʰəjàɪɴ]). These districts consist of townships (မြို့နယ်; myo-ne, IPA: [mjo̰nɛ̀]) that include towns (မြို့; myo, IPA: [mjo̰]), wards (ရပ်ကွက်; yatkwet, IPA: [jaʔ kwɛʔ])) and village tracts (ကျေးရွာအုပ်စု; kyayywa oksu, IPA: [tɕé jwà ʔoʊʔ sṵ]). Village tracts are groups of adjacent villages (ကျေးရွာ; kyayywa, IPA: [tɕé jwà]).

Structural hierarchy edit

Level 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Division
Type
Union Territory
(ပြည်တောင်စုနယ်မြေ)
District
(ခရိုင်)
Township
(မြို့နယ်)*
Ward
(ရပ်ကွက်)
Region
(တိုင်းဒေသကြီး)
State
(ပြည်နယ်)
Village tract
(ကျေးရွာအုပ်စု)
Village
(ကျေးရွာ)
Self-Administered Division
(ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရတိုင်း)
Self-Administered Zone
(ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ)
  • Some townships are divided into Subtownships (မြို့နယ်ခွဲ), which are semi-official parts of a township administered separately. Many reports will use subtownships, especially more established subtownships used by the main townships themselves.

Administrative divisions edit

Regions, States and Union Territory edit

Flag Name Burmese Capital ISO Region Pop.
(2014)
Area
(km2)
  Ayeyarwady Region ဧရာဝတီတိုင်းဒေသကြီး Pathein MM-07 South 6,184,829[2] 35,031.8
  Bago Region ပဲခူးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး Bago MM-02 South, Central 4,867,373[2] 39,402.3
  Chin State ချင်းပြည်နယ် Hakha MM-14 North, West 478,801[2] 36,018.8
  Kachin State ကချင်ပြည်နယ် Myitkyina MM-11 North 1,689,441[2] 89,041.8
  Kayah State ကယားပြည်နယ် Loikaw MM-12 East 286,627[2] 11,731.5
  Kayin State ကရင်ပြည်နယ် Hpa-an MM-13 South, East 1,574,079[2] 30,383
  Magway Region မကွေးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး Magwe MM-03 Central 3,917,055[2] 44,820.6
  Mandalay Region မန္တလေးတိုင်းဒေသကြီး Mandalay MM-04 Central 6,165,723[2] 37,945.6
  Mon State မွန်ပြည်နယ် Mawlamyine MM-15 South 2,054,393[2] 12,296.6
  Naypyidaw Union Territory နေပြည်တော် ပြည်ထောင်စုနယ်မြေ Naypyidaw MM-18 Central 1,160,242[2] 7,054
  Rakhine State ရခိုင်ပြည်နယ် Sittwe MM-16 West 3,188,807[2] 36,778.0
  Sagaing Region စစ်ကိုင်းတိုင်းဒေသကြီး Monywa MM-01 North, West 5,325,347[2] 93,704.8
  Shan State ရှမ်းပြည်နယ် Taunggyi MM-17 North, East 5,824,432[2] 155,801.3
  Tanintharyi Region တနင်္သာရီတိုင်းဒေသကြီး Dawei MM-05 South 1,408,401[2] 44,344.9
  Yangon Region ရန်ကုန်တိုင်းဒေသကြီး Yangon MM-06 Central 7,360,703[2] 10,276.7

Self-Administered Division and Self-Administered Zones edit

 
Self-Administered Division and Self-Administered Zones
Flag Name Burmese Capital State Population
  Danu Self-Administered Zone ဓနုကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ Pindaya Shan State 161,835
  Kokang Self-Administered Zone ကိုးကန့်ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ Laukkai Shan State 123,733
  Naga Self-Administered Zone နာဂကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ Lahe Sagaing Region 116,828
  Pa Laung Self-Administered Zone ပလောင်းကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ Namhsan Shan State 110,805
  Pa'O Self-Administered Zone ပအိုဝ့်ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ Hopong Shan State 380,427
  Wa Self-Administered Division ဝကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရတိုင်း Hopang Shan State 558,000

System of administration edit

 
  States of Myanmar
  Regions of Myanmar

The administrative structure of the states, regions and self-administering bodies is outlined in the new constitution adopted in 2008.[3]

Regions and States edit

Executive authority is held in each state or region by a Regional or State Government consisting of a Chief Minister, other ministers and an Advocate General.[4] The President appoints the Chief Minister from a list of qualified candidates in the regional or state legislature; the regional or state legislature must approve the President's choice unless they can prove that he or she does not meet the constitutional qualifications.[4]

Legislative authority resides with the State Hluttaw or Regional Hluttaw made up of elected civilian members and representatives of the Armed Forces. Both divisions are considered equivalent, the only distinction being that states have large ethnic minority populations and regions are mostly populated by the national majority Burmans / Bamar.[5]

Naypyidaw Union Territory edit

The constitution states that Naypyidaw shall be a Union Territory under the direct administration of the President. Day-to-day functions would be carried out on the President's behalf by the Naypyidaw Council led by a Chairperson. The Chairperson and members of the Naypyidaw Council are appointed by the President and shall include civilians and representatives of the Armed Forces.

Self-Administered Division and Self-Administered Zones edit

Self-Administered Zones and Self-Administered Divisions are administered by a Leading Body. The Leading Body consists of at least ten members and includes State or Regional Hluttaw members elected from the Zones or Divisions and other members nominated by the Armed Forces. The Leading Body has both executive and legislative powers. A Chairperson is head of each Leading Body.

Within Sagaing Region:[6]

  • Naga (Leshi, Lahe, and Namyun townships)

Within Shan State:

Districts and Townships edit

Districts are the second-order divisions of Myanmar and are often named after a population center within the district of the same name. Shan State has the most districts, even excluding Self-Administered Zones and Divisions. Naypyidaw Union Territory and Mon State have the least with just 2 districts. The District's role is more supervisory as the 330 townships are the basic administrative unit of local governance and are the only type of administrative division that covers the entirety of Myanmar. A District is led by a District Administrator and a Township is administered by a Township Administrator. Both are appointed civil servants through the General Administration Department (GAD) of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MOHA). The Minister of Home Affairs is to be appointed by the military according to the 2008 constitution. [7]

Most local governance services are offered at the Township level; few services are offered at the District level. The Township Administrator is the key focal point for most interactions with the government and the Township Administrator serves as a representative of the State or Region government and executes functions on behalf of the State or Region.[7] All Township governments are staffed by 34 GAD civil servants regardless of population, although larger townships may have several Township committees that coordinate with the Township and report to the District.[8] Subtownships exist for many but not all townships. They can be created for many reasons including, townships with large areas, townships with a large natural barrier or townships with a lopsided population distribution. These subtownships are unofficial, but can be used by the Township administration and national ministries for data collection and administrative ease.

Wards, Village Tracts and Municipalities edit

The fourth and lowest level of administration is the ward for urban areas and village tract for rural areas. Some townships include areas not part of any ward or village tract. Village Tracts may contain up to 8 distinct villages. Most townships contain at least one ward/town, and are usually named after the population center. As of reforms in 2012 and 2013, Ward and Village Tract administrators are now typically elected, but report to the appointed Township Administrator. Ward Administrators and Village Tract Administrators (also called just Village Administrators) are supported by 100-household-heads and 10-household-heads who are collectively called area leaders.

Most cities in Myanmar are contained within one township like Pathein. In some cases, the rural portions of the township may be administered semi-independently as sub-townships.[9] In larger cities, like Mandalay, the municipality may be functionally administered at a district level with townships acting de facto as subdivisions of a city.[10] In Yangon, the administrative jurisdiction of the Yangon City Development Committee overlap across 33 townships and all 4 of Yangon Region's districts.[11]

History edit

British colonisation edit

In 1900, Burma was a province of British India, and was divided into two subdivisions: Lower Burma, whose capital was Rangoon with four divisions (Arakan, Irrawaddy, Pegu, Tenasserim), and Upper Burma, whose capital was Mandalay with six divisions (Meiktila, Minbu, Sagaing, North Federated Shan States and South Federated Shan States).

On 10 October 1922, the Karenni States of Bawlake, Kantarawaddy, and Kyebogyi became a part of the Federated Shan States. In 1940, Minbu division's name was changed to Magwe, and Meiktila Divisions became part of Mandalay District.

Post-independence edit

Upon independence, on 4 January 1948, the Chin Hills area was split from Arakan Division to form Chin Special Division, and Kachin State was formed by carving out the Myitkyina and Bhamo districts of Mandalay Division. Karen State was also created from Amherst, Thaton, and Toungoo Districts of Tenasserim Division. Karenni State was separated from the Federated Shan States, and Shan State was formed by merging the Federated Shan States and the Wa States.

In 1952, Karenni State was renamed Kayah State. In 1964, Rangoon Division was separated from Pegu Division, whose capital shifted to Pegu. In addition, Karen State was renamed Kawthoolei State.

In 1972, the Hanthawaddy and Hmawbi districts were moved under Rangoon Division's juridstiction.

In 1974, after Ne Win introduced a constitution, Chin Special Division became a state, and its capital moved from Falam to Hakha. Kawthoolei State's name was reverted to Karen State. Mon State was created out of portions of Tenasserim Division and Pegu Division. Mon State's capital became Moulmein, and Tenasserim Division's became Tavoy. In addition, Rakhine Division was granted statehood.

In 1989, after the coup d'état by the military junta, the names of many divisions in Burma were altered in English to reflect Burmese pronunciations.[12]

After 1995, in Kachin State Mohnyin District was created out of Myitkyina District as part of the peace agreement with the Kachin Independence Army.

2008 Constitution edit

The 2008 Constitution stipulates the renaming of the 7 "divisions" (တိုင်း in Burmese) as "regions" (တိုင်းဒေသကြီး[13] in Burmese). It also stipulates the creation of Union territories, which include the capital of Nay Pyi Taw and ethnic self-administered zones (ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရဒေသ[13] in Burmese) and self-administered divisions (ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရတိုင်း[13] in Burmese).[14] These self-administered regions include the following:

On 20 August 2010, the renaming of the 7 divisions and the naming of the 6 self-administered zones was announced by Burmese state media.[1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "တိုင်းခုနစ်တိုင်းကို တိုင်းဒေသကြီးများအဖြစ် လည်းကောင်း၊ ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရ တိုင်းနှင့် ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရ ဒေသများ ရုံးစိုက်ရာ မြို့များကို လည်းကောင်း ပြည်ထောင်စုနယ်မြေတွင် ခရိုင်နှင့်မြို့နယ်များကို လည်းကောင်း သတ်မှတ်ကြေညာ". Weekly Eleven News (in Burmese). 20 August 2010. Retrieved 23 August 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o The Union Report: Census Report Volume 2. The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census. Nay Pyi Taw: Ministry of Immigration and Population. 2015. p. 12.
  3. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 April 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Constitution of the Republican of the Union of Myanmar" (PDF). burmalibrary.org. Minister of Information. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  5. ^ "Myanmar's States and Regions – The Asia Foundation" (PDF). Asiafoundation.org. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  6. ^ "Ethnic Politics in Burma: The Time for Solutions". Tni.org. 14 February 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  7. ^ a b UNDP (June 2015). Mapping the State of Local Governance in Myanmar: Background and Methodology (Report). United Nations.
  8. ^ Arnold, Matthew; Ye Thu Aung; Kempel, Susanne; Kyi Pyar Chit Saw (July 2015). Municipal Governance in Myanmar: An Overview of Developmental Affairs Organisations (PDF) (Report). Asia Foundation.
  9. ^ Pathein Township. မြို့နယ်အထွေထွေအုပ်ချုပ်ရေးဦးစီးဌာန ပုသိမ်မြို့နယ် ဒေသဆိုင်ရာအချက်လက်များ (Report). Myanmar Information Management Unit.
  10. ^ (PDF). State Law and Order Restoration Council Law. 29 December 1992. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 June 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  11. ^ (PDF). Myanmar Information Management Unit. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2019. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  12. ^ "An Introduction to the Toponymy of Burma" The Permanent Committee of Geographic Names (PCGN), United Kingdom, October 2007, accessed 18 April 2010
  13. ^ a b c ပြည်ထောင်စုသမ္မတမြန်မာနိုင်ငံတော် ဖွဲ့စည်းပုံအခြေခံဥပဒေ (၂၀၀၈ ခုနှစ်) (in Burmese) [0]=1|2008 Constitution PDF 1 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar (2008)

External links edit

  • Statoids

administrative, divisions, myanmar, myanmar, divided, into, twenty, administrative, subdivisions, which, include, regions, states, union, territory, self, administered, division, self, administered, zones, following, table, government, subdivisions, organizati. Myanmar is divided into twenty one administrative subdivisions which include 7 regions 7 states 1 union territory 1 self administered division and 5 self administered zones Following is the table of government subdivisions and its organizational structure based on different regions states the union territory the self administered division and the self administered zones Administrative divisions of MyanmarA clickable map of Burma Myanmar exhibiting its first level administrative divisions CategoryUnitary stateLocationMyanmarNumber7 regions 7 states 1 union territory 1 self administered division and 5 self administered zones as of 2015 Populations286 627 Kayah State 7 360 703 Yangon Region Areas7 054 km2 2 724 sq mi Naypyidaw Union Territory 155 801 km2 60 155 sq mi Shan State GovernmentGovernment of MyanmarSubdivisionsDistrictTownshipWard and Village tractVillageThis article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script Type Burmese name No of div Region တ င ဒ သက tuing desa kri IPA taɪɰ de8a dʑi tain deithac i 7State ပ ည နယ pranynai IPA pjinɛ pyine 7Union Territory ပ ည ထ င စ နယ မ pranytaungcu nai mre IPA pjidaʊɰ zṵnɛ mje pyiṯauns unemyei 1Self AdministeredDivision က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရ တ င kuiypuing uphkyuphkwang ra tuing IPA kobaɪɰ ʔoʊʔtɕʰoʊʔ kʰwɪ ɰ ja taɪɰ koup ain ouʔhcouʔ hkwinya tain 1Self AdministeredZone က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ kuiypuing uphkyuphkwang ra desa IPA kobaɪɰ ʔoʊʔtɕʰoʊʔ kʰwɪ ɰ ja de8a koup ain ouʔhcouʔ hkwinya deitha 5The regions were called divisions prior to August 2010 1 and four of them are named after their capital city the exceptions being Sagaing Region Ayeyarwady Region and Tanintharyi Region The regions can be described as ethnically predominantly Burman Bamar while the states the zones and Wa Division are dominated by ethnic minorities Yangon Region has the largest population and is the most densely populated The smallest population is Kayah State In terms of land area Shan State is the largest and Naypyidaw Union Territory is the smallest Regions and states are divided into districts ခရ င kha yaing or khayaing IPA kʰejaɪɴ These districts consist of townships မ နယ myo ne IPA mjo nɛ that include towns မ myo IPA mjo wards ရပ က က yatkwet IPA jaʔ kwɛʔ and village tracts က ရ အ ပ စ kyayywa oksu IPA tɕe jwa ʔoʊʔ sṵ Village tracts are groups of adjacent villages က ရ kyayywa IPA tɕe jwa Contents 1 Structural hierarchy 2 Administrative divisions 2 1 Regions States and Union Territory 2 2 Self Administered Division and Self Administered Zones 3 System of administration 3 1 Regions and States 3 2 Naypyidaw Union Territory 3 3 Self Administered Division and Self Administered Zones 3 4 Districts and Townships 3 5 Wards Village Tracts and Municipalities 4 History 4 1 British colonisation 4 2 Post independence 4 3 2008 Constitution 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksStructural hierarchy editLevel 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5thDivisionType Union Territory ပ ည တ င စ နယ မ District ခရ င Township မ နယ Ward ရပ က က Region တ င ဒ သက State ပ ည နယ Village tract က ရ အ ပ စ Village က ရ Self Administered Division က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရတ င Self Administered Zone က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ Some townships are divided into Subtownships မ နယ ခ which are semi official parts of a township administered separately Many reports will use subtownships especially more established subtownships used by the main townships themselves Administrative divisions editRegions States and Union Territory edit Flag Name Burmese Capital ISO Region Pop 2014 Area km2 nbsp Ayeyarwady Region ဧရ ဝတ တ င ဒ သက Pathein MM 07 South 6 184 829 2 35 031 8 nbsp Bago Region ပ ခ တ င ဒ သက Bago MM 02 South Central 4 867 373 2 39 402 3 nbsp Chin State ခ င ပ ည နယ Hakha MM 14 North West 478 801 2 36 018 8 nbsp Kachin State ကခ င ပ ည နယ Myitkyina MM 11 North 1 689 441 2 89 041 8 nbsp Kayah State ကယ ပ ည နယ Loikaw MM 12 East 286 627 2 11 731 5 nbsp Kayin State ကရင ပ ည နယ Hpa an MM 13 South East 1 574 079 2 30 383 nbsp Magway Region မက တ င ဒ သက Magwe MM 03 Central 3 917 055 2 44 820 6 nbsp Mandalay Region မန တလ တ င ဒ သက Mandalay MM 04 Central 6 165 723 2 37 945 6 nbsp Mon State မ န ပ ည နယ Mawlamyine MM 15 South 2 054 393 2 12 296 6 nbsp Naypyidaw Union Territory န ပ ည တ ပ ည ထ င စ နယ မ Naypyidaw MM 18 Central 1 160 242 2 7 054 nbsp Rakhine State ရခ င ပ ည နယ Sittwe MM 16 West 3 188 807 2 36 778 0 nbsp Sagaing Region စစ က င တ င ဒ သက Monywa MM 01 North West 5 325 347 2 93 704 8 nbsp Shan State ရ မ ပ ည နယ Taunggyi MM 17 North East 5 824 432 2 155 801 3 nbsp Tanintharyi Region တနင သ ရ တ င ဒ သက Dawei MM 05 South 1 408 401 2 44 344 9 nbsp Yangon Region ရန က န တ င ဒ သက Yangon MM 06 Central 7 360 703 2 10 276 7Self Administered Division and Self Administered Zones edit Main article Self administered zone nbsp Self Administered Division and Self Administered ZonesFlag Name Burmese Capital State Population nbsp Danu Self Administered Zone ဓန က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ Pindaya Shan State 161 835 nbsp Kokang Self Administered Zone က ကန က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ Laukkai Shan State 123 733 nbsp Naga Self Administered Zone န ဂက ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ Lahe Sagaing Region 116 828 nbsp Pa Laung Self Administered Zone ပလ င က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ Namhsan Shan State 110 805 nbsp Pa O Self Administered Zone ပအ ဝ က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ Hopong Shan State 380 427 nbsp Wa Self Administered Division ဝက ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရတ င Hopang Shan State 558 000System of administration edit nbsp States of Myanmar Regions of MyanmarThe administrative structure of the states regions and self administering bodies is outlined in the new constitution adopted in 2008 3 Regions and States edit Executive authority is held in each state or region by a Regional or State Government consisting of a Chief Minister other ministers and an Advocate General 4 The President appoints the Chief Minister from a list of qualified candidates in the regional or state legislature the regional or state legislature must approve the President s choice unless they can prove that he or she does not meet the constitutional qualifications 4 Legislative authority resides with the State Hluttaw or Regional Hluttaw made up of elected civilian members and representatives of the Armed Forces Both divisions are considered equivalent the only distinction being that states have large ethnic minority populations and regions are mostly populated by the national majority Burmans Bamar 5 Naypyidaw Union Territory edit Main article Naypyidaw Union Territory The constitution states that Naypyidaw shall be a Union Territory under the direct administration of the President Day to day functions would be carried out on the President s behalf by the Naypyidaw Council led by a Chairperson The Chairperson and members of the Naypyidaw Council are appointed by the President and shall include civilians and representatives of the Armed Forces Self Administered Division and Self Administered Zones edit Self Administered Zones and Self Administered Divisions are administered by a Leading Body The Leading Body consists of at least ten members and includes State or Regional Hluttaw members elected from the Zones or Divisions and other members nominated by the Armed Forces The Leading Body has both executive and legislative powers A Chairperson is head of each Leading Body Within Sagaing Region 6 Naga Leshi Lahe and Namyun townships Within Shan State Danu Self Administered Zone Ywangan and Pindaya townships Kokang Self Administered Zone Konkyan and Laukkai townships Pa Laung Self Administered Zone Namshan and Manton townships Pa O Self Administered Zone Hopong Hshihseng and Pinlaung townships Wa Self Administered Division Hopang Mongmao Panwai Pangsang Naphan and Metman townships Districts and Townships edit Districts are the second order divisions of Myanmar and are often named after a population center within the district of the same name Shan State has the most districts even excluding Self Administered Zones and Divisions Naypyidaw Union Territory and Mon State have the least with just 2 districts The District s role is more supervisory as the 330 townships are the basic administrative unit of local governance and are the only type of administrative division that covers the entirety of Myanmar A District is led by a District Administrator and a Township is administered by a Township Administrator Both are appointed civil servants through the General Administration Department GAD of the Ministry of Home Affairs MOHA The Minister of Home Affairs is to be appointed by the military according to the 2008 constitution 7 Most local governance services are offered at the Township level few services are offered at the District level The Township Administrator is the key focal point for most interactions with the government and the Township Administrator serves as a representative of the State or Region government and executes functions on behalf of the State or Region 7 All Township governments are staffed by 34 GAD civil servants regardless of population although larger townships may have several Township committees that coordinate with the Township and report to the District 8 Subtownships exist for many but not all townships They can be created for many reasons including townships with large areas townships with a large natural barrier or townships with a lopsided population distribution These subtownships are unofficial but can be used by the Township administration and national ministries for data collection and administrative ease Wards Village Tracts and Municipalities edit The fourth and lowest level of administration is the ward for urban areas and village tract for rural areas Some townships include areas not part of any ward or village tract Village Tracts may contain up to 8 distinct villages Most townships contain at least one ward town and are usually named after the population center As of reforms in 2012 and 2013 Ward and Village Tract administrators are now typically elected but report to the appointed Township Administrator Ward Administrators and Village Tract Administrators also called just Village Administrators are supported by 100 household heads and 10 household heads who are collectively called area leaders Most cities in Myanmar are contained within one township like Pathein In some cases the rural portions of the township may be administered semi independently as sub townships 9 In larger cities like Mandalay the municipality may be functionally administered at a district level with townships acting de facto as subdivisions of a city 10 In Yangon the administrative jurisdiction of the Yangon City Development Committee overlap across 33 townships and all 4 of Yangon Region s districts 11 History editBritish colonisation edit In 1900 Burma was a province of British India and was divided into two subdivisions Lower Burma whose capital was Rangoon with four divisions Arakan Irrawaddy Pegu Tenasserim and Upper Burma whose capital was Mandalay with six divisions Meiktila Minbu Sagaing North Federated Shan States and South Federated Shan States On 10 October 1922 the Karenni States of Bawlake Kantarawaddy and Kyebogyi became a part of the Federated Shan States In 1940 Minbu division s name was changed to Magwe and Meiktila Divisions became part of Mandalay District Post independence edit Upon independence on 4 January 1948 the Chin Hills area was split from Arakan Division to form Chin Special Division and Kachin State was formed by carving out the Myitkyina and Bhamo districts of Mandalay Division Karen State was also created from Amherst Thaton and Toungoo Districts of Tenasserim Division Karenni State was separated from the Federated Shan States and Shan State was formed by merging the Federated Shan States and the Wa States In 1952 Karenni State was renamed Kayah State In 1964 Rangoon Division was separated from Pegu Division whose capital shifted to Pegu In addition Karen State was renamed Kawthoolei State In 1972 the Hanthawaddy and Hmawbi districts were moved under Rangoon Division s juridstiction In 1974 after Ne Win introduced a constitution Chin Special Division became a state and its capital moved from Falam to Hakha Kawthoolei State s name was reverted to Karen State Mon State was created out of portions of Tenasserim Division and Pegu Division Mon State s capital became Moulmein and Tenasserim Division s became Tavoy In addition Rakhine Division was granted statehood In 1989 after the coup d etat by the military junta the names of many divisions in Burma were altered in English to reflect Burmese pronunciations 12 After 1995 in Kachin State Mohnyin District was created out of Myitkyina District as part of the peace agreement with the Kachin Independence Army 2008 Constitution edit The 2008 Constitution stipulates the renaming of the 7 divisions တ င in Burmese as regions တ င ဒ သက 13 in Burmese It also stipulates the creation of Union territories which include the capital of Nay Pyi Taw and ethnic self administered zones က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရဒ သ 13 in Burmese and self administered divisions က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရတ င 13 in Burmese 14 These self administered regions include the following Danu Self Administered Zone consisting of Ywangan and Pindaya townships in Shan State Kokang Self Administered Zone consisting of Konkyan and Laukkai townships in Shan State Naga Self Administered Zone consisting of Leshi Lahe and Namyun townships in Sagaing Region Pa Laung Self Administered Zone consisting of Namhsan and Manton townships in Shan State Pa O Self Administered Zone consisting of Hopong Hsihseng and Pinlaung townships in Shan State Wa Self Administered Division consisting of Hopang Mongmao Panwai Nahpan Metman and Pangsang Pankham townships in Shan StateOn 20 August 2010 the renaming of the 7 divisions and the naming of the 6 self administered zones was announced by Burmese state media 1 See also edit nbsp Myanmar portalList of administrative divisions of Myanmar by Human Development Index Districts of Myanmar List of cities and largest towns in Myanmar State and Region Government of Myanmar List of Burmese flags ISO 3166 2 MMReferences edit a b တ င ခ နစ တ င က တ င ဒ သက မ အဖ စ လည က င က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရ တ င န င က ယ ပ င အ ပ ခ ပ ခ င ရ ဒ သမ ရ စ က ရ မ မ က လည က င ပ ည ထ င စ နယ မ တ င ခရ င န င မ နယ မ က လည က င သတ မ တ က ည Weekly Eleven News in Burmese 20 August 2010 Retrieved 23 August 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o The Union Report Census Report Volume 2 The 2014 Myanmar Population and Housing Census Nay Pyi Taw Ministry of Immigration and Population 2015 p 12 Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar 2008 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 April 2011 Retrieved 16 January 2018 a b Constitution of the Republican of the Union of Myanmar PDF burmalibrary org Minister of Information Retrieved 22 December 2020 Myanmar s States and Regions The Asia Foundation PDF Asiafoundation org Retrieved 16 January 2018 Ethnic Politics in Burma The Time for Solutions Tni org 14 February 2011 Retrieved 16 January 2018 a b UNDP June 2015 Mapping the State of Local Governance in Myanmar Background and Methodology Report United Nations Arnold Matthew Ye Thu Aung Kempel Susanne Kyi Pyar Chit Saw July 2015 Municipal Governance in Myanmar An Overview of Developmental Affairs Organisations PDF Report Asia Foundation Pathein Township မ နယ အထ ထ အ ပ ခ ပ ရ ဦ စ ဌ န ပ သ မ မ နယ ဒ သဆ င ရ အခ က လက မ Report Myanmar Information Management Unit THE CITY OF MANDALAY DEVELOPMENT LAW 1992 PDF State Law and Order Restoration Council Law 29 December 1992 Archived from the original PDF on 30 June 2015 Retrieved 27 June 2015 Districts in Yangon Region PDF Myanmar Information Management Unit Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2019 Retrieved 13 October 2019 An Introduction to the Toponymy of Burma The Permanent Committee of Geographic Names PCGN United Kingdom October 2007 accessed 18 April 2010 a b c ပ ည ထ င စ သမ မတမ န မ န င င တ ဖ စည ပ အခ ခ ဥပဒ ၂၀၀၈ ခ န စ in Burmese 0 1 2008 Constitution PDF Archived 1 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar 2008 External links editStatoids Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Administrative divisions of Myanmar amp oldid 1168492485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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