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Boroughs of Mexico : ウィキペディア英語版 | Boroughs of Mexico In Mexico, boroughs, into which some municipalities and the Federal District are divided for administrative purposes, are known as ''delegaciones'' (sing. ''delegación''). Boroughs can either be second-level semi-autonomous administrative divisions –as it is the case in the Federal District– or third-level non-autonomous administrative divisions –as it is the case in all other municipalities that have implemented this particular territorial organization. The limits, nature and competencies of boroughs are usually described in the constitutions of the states they are part of, or in the laws enacted by the municipality itself, and may differ from municipality to municipality. ==Boroughs of the Federal District==
Since Mexico City does not belong to any particular state, but to the federation, it is a federal district, and as such, a first-level administrative division ''on par'' with the states of Mexico, even if it differs in the nature of its autonomy and legislative powers. The 16 boroughs in which the Federal District is divided are semi-autonomous, in that a head of government, called simply "head of the borough" (''jefe delegacional'', in Spanish), is elected by the residents through direct suffrage. However, unlike the municipalities of Mexico, they do not have regulatory powers, and many of the services are still provided by the government of the Federal District itself. The boroughs of the Federal District are, nonetheless, second-level administrative divisions, and are usually included in cross-municipal statistical comparisons with the municipalities of Mexico, which are the internal divisions of the states.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Boroughs of Mexico」の詳細全文を読む
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