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{{Infobox political division
{{Infobox country
| name                = Mava
| micronation            = <!--yes if a micronation-->
| native_name         = <small>Maava</small>
| conventional_long_name = Sustainable Republic of Mava
| native_name_lang    =
| native_name           = ''Mava Repalik Aituniajiin'' (Mavean)<br>''República Sostenible de Mava'' (Almagrian)<br>''Repulika Aisteniale de Mava'' (Kiurut Creole)
| other_name          = Mava Islands
| common_name            = Mava
| settlement_type    = Sui generis territory
| status                = <!--Status of country-->
| image_skyline      =  
| image_flag            = Flag of Mava.png
| image_size          =  
| alt_flag              = Flag of Mava
| image_alt          =  
| flag_border            = <!--set to no to disable border around the flag-->
| image_caption      =  
| image_flag2            = <!--e.g. Second-flag of country.svg-->
| image_flag          =Flag of Mava.png
| alt_flag2              = <!--alt text for second flag-->
| flag_size = 120
| flag2_border          = <!--set to no to disable border around the flag-->
| flag_link = Flag and emblem of Mava
| image_coat            = Seal of Mava.png
| image_seal = Emblem of Mava.png
| alt_coat              = Seal of Mava
| seal_size = 90
| symbol_type            = Seal
| seal_type = Emblem
| national_motto        = ''Aat maujut autait kaini haat guan nisanutinni'' (Mavean)
| seal_link = Flag and emblem of Mava
| englishmotto          = "The ten righteous men are found here"
| image_shield        =  
| national_anthem        = ''Mava Tuvit''<br>"Our Mava"<br>[[File:United States Navy Band - Yumi, Yumi, Yumi.ogg]]
| shield_size        =  
| royal_anthem          = <!--in inverted commas and wikilinked if link exists-->
| shield_alt          =  
| other_symbol_type      = <!--Use if a further symbol exists, e.g. hymn-->
| shield_link        =  
| other_symbol          =  
| image_blank_emblem  =  
| image_map              = File:Mava on the globe (small islands magnified).png
| blank_emblem_size  =  
| loctext                = <!--text description of location of country-->
| blank_emblem_alt    =  
| alt_map                = <!--alt text for map-->
| blank_emblem_type  =  
| map_caption            = Location of Mava in the Sarosan Ocean
| blank_emblem_link  =  
| image_map_size        = 290
| etymology          =  
| image_map2            = <!--Another map, if required-->
| nickname            =  
| alt_map2               = <!--alt text for second map-->
| motto               =  
| map_caption2          = <!--Caption to place below second map-->
| anthem              = ''Maava Mulatkiimiik''<br><small>"Anthem of Mava"</small>
| image_map2_size        = <!--Map size in number of pixels-->
| song               =  
| capital               = Taalan
| image_map = File:Triania-Mava.png
| coordinates            = <!-- Coordinates for capital, using {{tl|coord}} -->
| map_caption = {{map caption|location_color=circled|country=Mava|region=Triania|region_color=dark green}}
| largest_city          = Taalan
| mapsize = 270px
| admin_center          = Kuatni{{efn|The President's Office and a number of government departments are located in Kuatni, although Taalan remains the official capital.}}
| coordinates        =
| official_languages    = {{hlist|Mavean|Almagrian}}
| subdivision_type    = Country
| national_languages    = <!--Country/territory-wide languages recognised but not necessarily in country/territory-wide law, etc-->
| subdivision_name    = {{flagicon image|Flag of Atitlán.png}} [[Atitlan]]
| regional_languages    = Kiurut Creole<sup>a</sup>
| established_title  = Settlement
| languages_type        = <!--Use to specify a further type of language, if not official, national or regional-->
| established_date    = 9th century
| languages              = <!--Languages of the further type-->
| established_title2  = Annexation
| languages_sub          = <!--Is this further type of language a sub-item of the previous non-sub type? ("yes" or "no")-->
| established_date2  = 13 July 1836
| languages2_type       = <!--Another further type of language-->
| established_title3  = Current status
| languages2             = <!--Languages of this second further type-->
| established_date3  = 1 March 1961
| languages2_sub        = <!--Is the second alternative type of languages a sub-item of the previous non-sub type? ("yes" or "no")-->
| extinct_title      =  
| ethnic_groups          = 52.1% mixed<br>38.5% indigenous<br>9.4% other
| extinct_date       =  
| ethnic_groups_year    = 2022
| founder             =  
| ethnic_groups_ref      = <!--(for any ref/s to associate with ethnic groups data)-->
| named_for          =  
| religion              = 87.3% Christianity<br>5.1% no religion<br>3.2% folk religion<br>4.4% other
| capital            = Paas
| religion_year          = 2022
| largest_settlement  =  
| religion_ref          = <!--(for any ref/s to associate with religion data)-->
| official_languages  = {{hlist|[[Mavean language|Mavean]]|{{wp|Spanish language|Almagrian}}}}
| demonym                = [[Mavean passport|Mavean]]
| ethnic_groups      =  
| government_type       = Unitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidency
| religion            =  
| leader_title1         = [[President of Mava|Acting President]]
| demonym            = Mavean<br>''Mavanik'' (mv)<br>''Mavés'' (al)
| leader_name1           = Maak Juaija
| government_type     = Devolved locally-administered unincorporated area within a constitutional monarchy
| leader_title2         = Senior Secretary & Secretary in the President's Office
| leader_title1       = Monarch
| leader_name2           = Maak Juaija
| leader_name1       = Macuilxochitzin
| leader_title3         = Speaker of Congress
| leader_title2       = Representative of the Government
| leader_name3          = Taama Iativut
| leader_name2       = Jose Miguel Artigas
| legislature            = [[National Congress of Mava|National Congress]]
| leader_title3       = [[List of leaders of Mava|Leader of the Council]]
| upper_house            = <!--Name of governing body's upper house, if given (e.g. "Senate")-->
| leader_name3        = [[Kausaanek Malaati]]
| lower_house            = <!--Name of governing body's lower house, if given (e.g. "Chamber of Deputies")-->
| leader_title4      =  
| sovereignty_type      = Independence from [[Atitlan]]
| leader_name4        =  
| sovereignty_note      =  
| legislature        = [[Mava Council]]
| established_event1    = Independence declared
| upper_house        =  
| established_date1      = 1 March 1970
| lower_house        =  
| established_event2    = Current constitution
| national_representation =  
| established_date2      = 18 August 1997
| national_representation_type1 =  
| established_event13    = <!--(up to 13 distinct events may be included)-->
| national_representation1 =  
| established_date13    =  
| national_representation_type2 =  
| area_rank              =  
| national_representation2 =  
| area                  = <!--Major area size (in [[Template:convert]] either km2 or sqmi first)-->
| area_km2            = 1,734
| area_km2              = 252.29
| area_rank          = not ranked
| area_sq_mi            = <!--Area in square mi (requires area_km2)-->
| area_sq_mi          =  
| area_footnote          = <!--Optional footnote for area-->
| percent_water      =  
| percent_water          = negligible
| elevation_footnotes =  
| area_label            = Total
| elevation_max_m=1345
| area_label2            = <!--Label below area_label (optional)-->
| population_total =  
| area_data2            = <!--Text after area_label2 (optional)-->
| population_as_of =
| population_estimate   = 37,302
| population_footnotes =  
| population_estimate = 4,713
| population_census  =
| population_estimate_year = 2022
| population_estimate_rank =  
| population_estimate_rank =  
| population_estimate_year = 2024
| population_census      =
| population_census_year =  
| population_census_year =  
| population_density_km2 = 1
| population_density_km2 = 172.3
| population_density_sq_mi = <!-- Do not remove as per WP:MOSNUM -->
| population_density_sq_mi =  
| population_density_rank =  
| population_density_rank =  
| GVA                = <!-- GVA is UK specific -->
| nummembers            = <!--An alternative to population for micronation-->
| GVA_year            =  
| GDP_PPP                = $421.587 million
| GVA_rank            =
| GDP_PPP_rank          =  
| GVA_per_capita      =
| GDP_PPP_year           = 2023
| GVA_per_capita_rank =
| GDP_PPP_per_capita     = $11,203
| GDP_PPP            =  
| GDP_PPP_year       =
| GDP_PPP_rank        =  
| GDP_PPP_per_capita =  
| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank =  
| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank =  
| GDP_nominal         = $75.261 million
| GDP_nominal           = $220.342 million
| GDP_nominal_year    = not ranked
| GDP_nominal_rank      =  
| GDP_nominal_rank    =  
| GDP_nominal_year      = 2023
| GDP_nominal_per_capita = $15,969
| GDP_nominal_per_capita = $5,907
| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = not ranked
| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =  
| Gini               =  
| Gini                   = 39.2
| Gini_year          =  
| Gini_ref              = <!--(for any ref/s to associate with Gini number)-->
| Gini_change         = <!-- increase/decrease/steady -->
| Gini_rank              =  
| Gini_ref            =  
| Gini_change           = decrease<!-- increase/decrease/steady -->
| HDI                 = <!-- number only -->
| Gini_year              = 2023
| HDI_year            = <!-- Please use the year to which the data refers, not the publication year-->
| HDI_year              = 2023
| HDI_change          = <!-- increase/decrease/steady -->
| HDI                   = 0.657
| HDI_ref            =  
| HDI_change            = increase
| HDI_rank            =  
| HDI_rank              =
| currency=Atitlanese peso ($){{efn|The [[Mava peso]] is a local issue of the Atitlanese peso issued for collectors rather than for circulation.}}
| HDI_ref                = <!--(for any ref/s to associate with HDI number)-->
| currency_code=ATP
| currency              = [[Mavean pauna|Pauna]]
| timezone            = UTC-09:00
| currency_code          = MVP
| utc_offset          =
| time_zone              = UTC-9 (MVT)
| date_format         = dd/mm/yyyy (AD)
| utc_offset            =
| electricity        =  
| time_zone_DST          = <!--Link to DST (Daylight Saving Time) used, otherwise leave empty-->
| drives_on          =  
| utc_offset_DST        = <!--in the form "+N", where N is number of hours offset-->
| calling_code       = +910
| DST_note              = <!--Optional note regarding DST use-->
| iso_code            = {{hlist|MV|AT-MV}}
| antipodes              = <!--Place/s exactly on the opposite side of the world to country/territory-->
| postal_code        =  
| date_format           = dd/mm/yyyy
| cctld              = .mv, .at
| drives_on              = right
| website             =  
| cctld                  = .mv
| footnotes          =  
| iso3166code            = <!--ISO code only; no extra text. Use to override default from common_name parameter above; omit using "omit".-->
| embed              =  
| calling_code           =  
| image_map3            = <!--Optional third map position, e.g. for use with reference to footnotes below it-->
| alt_map3              = <!--alt text for third map position-->
| footnote_a            = Also known as "Almagro-Mavean"
| footnote_b             = <!--For any footnote <sup>b</sup> used above-->
| footnote_h            = <!--For any footnote <sup>h</sup> used above-->
| footnotes              = <!--For any generic non-numbered footnotes-->
}}
}}
'''Mava'''{{efn|[[Mavean language|Mavean]]: ''Maava''; {{wp|Spanish language|Almagrian}}: ''Mava''}}, officially the '''Mava Islands'''{{efn|Mavean: ''Maava Tokukmuuliku''}}, is an archipelago in the Sarosan Ocean. Composed principally of three main islands, of which only the largest is ocupied, the entire territory consists of around 1,700 sq km of territory in the western islands of [[Triania]]. Formally an unincorporated territorial area of [[Atitlan]], Mava has a significant degree of internal self-governance, with its status governed by statute and by international agreements relating to mining and commerce. The capital and only major settlement is Paas on the island of Mava.
'''Mava''' (/mɑːvə/), officially the '''Sustainable Republic of Mava''' (Mavean: ''Mava Repalik Aituniajiin''; Almagrian: ''República Sostenible de Mava''; Kiurut Creole: ''Repulika Aisteniale de Mava''), sometimes known by the acronym '''SRM''' or '''MRA''', is an island country and archipelagic state in the Sarosan Ocean. It consists of a group of islands, the largest and most populous of which is Mava, from which the country derives its name. With an estimated population of around 28,000 people (as of 2024) and a total land area of approximately 252 square kilometres, Mava is one of the smallest and least-populous countries in the world.


Settlers from continental Triania first arrived on the islands in the 9th century. Colonial contact with the islands occured in the 1820s, with the islands coming under Atitlanese rule in 1836 after a number of expeditions earlier in the decade. The islands served primarily as a naval station, giving Atitlan a greater presence in the Sarosan Ocean and a place in Triania, with little direct contact between Atitlan and Mavean peoples. Beginning in the 1920s, the island has possessed self-government. In 1929, the Mava Islands Council assumed some limited powers, significantly expanded in 1960. Due to the discovery of minerals and oils on the islands and in its territorial waters, Mava is governed as a pseudo-international territory, with the majority of Atitlanese laws not extending to it and the local government maintaining little regulation on migration.
Mava was sparsely inhabited prior to colonial contact in the 16th century. In the late 18th century, Atitlan formally colonised the islands, annexing them into Atitlan proper in 1871. The islands gained independence in 1970. Since independence, the islands have transitioned from an agricultural society to a more diversified service-based economy, characterised by the public sector and tourism. Since 1989, nominal GDP has grown consistently, with downturns only in 1998-2000 and 2010-13. In recent years, foreign direct investment has grown as successive governments have pursued liberal economic policies.


Mava is a self-governing parliamentary democracy. [[Mava Council]] functions as its parliament, located in the capital Paas. The [[List of leaders of Mava|Leader of the Council]] serves as head of government and is appointed by the council. The population, which is concentrated mainly on the northern coast of Mava Island, consists of mostly settlers, many of whom only reside during certain times of the year, with only 40 percent being indigenous Mavean. Although per capita income is around $15,000, there are sharp economic disparities between settlers and native Maveans.
Since independence, Mava has enjoyed a stable democratic system, although Atitlan continues to have a significant impact on Mavean politics through the close relations between the two governments and Atitlan's economic investment in the islands. According to a 2020 International Democracy Index report, Mava is a "party-free" nation, with fundamental freedoms respected but a political process inaccessible for large parts of the population.


==Etymology==
The majority of people of Mava trace at least part of their ancestry to the indigenous Trianian, belonging to the Paatuvit tribe that inhabited western Triania who eventually expanded to and then concentrated around the islands of the Sarosan Ocean. Most, however, are of mixed heritage (''kanisuat''), also possessing Atitlanese ancestry. Atitlanese influences also extend to religion, with most practising Catholicism, and is furthe evident in Mava's culture, customs, music, and politics, which combine native and Atitlanese influences. The country is a member of the United Nations and the Federated Island League of Elezia.
''Maava'' is a Mavean word which means "place of snow," referring to the islands' arctic conditions. This is the island's official name in Mavean; Atitlanese (and other languages) render the word as "Mava."


==History==
== History ==
===Self rule and modern history===
Beginning in the 1920s, proposals were presented for a form of self-government for the Mava Islands. Initial proposals were for Mava to be formally incorporated into Atitlan as a municipality, with its own municipal government and mayor. However, concerns over the rights of native Maveans should Mava become a part of Atitlan proper prompted new proposals maintaining separation between colony and mother nation. In 1928, the Law on the Government of Mava 1928 allowed for the creation of a local island council to govern in matters delegated to it.


In 1929, the Mava Islands Council was formally established. During this time, Atitlan maintained a strong military presence and resisted calls for the transfer of more power to the local authorities. Policies of cultural assimilation and the promotion of the Almagrian language continued unfettered, with many political figures criticising the council for being only a front for continuing colonial government. Nontheless, the council persued a policy of promoting Mavean culture and raising Mavean ethnic consciousness, which only increased calls for more autonomy.
=== Early 20th century ===
With the decline of the Atitlanese Empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and the gradual loss of many of its colonies, there was a rise in political consciousness in Mava. Amongst the Kanisuat community, which had long dominated political and economic life, there were concerns that possible independence may undermine their position. For indigenous Maveans, news of Atitlan's imperial decline inspired political activism, resulting in the formation of the Mavean National Committee for Political Change (GAKNM). The lack of voice for indigenous Maveans and the pressure that the GAKNM placed on the government for redress resulted in the creation of a new advisory council in 1922.


In the 1940s, the discovery of polymetallic nodules in Mavean territorial waters. The mining of nickel and copper drew in much-needed revenue in Mava drew international attention onto the islands. Atitlanese attempts to monopolise access alienated native Maveans, who believed it to be exploition, and the international community alike. By the 1950s, Atitlan faced significant pressure to open up Mava to the outside world; in 1959, an agreement between the Atitlanese government and the governments of '''''[INSERT HERE]''''' provided for the revision of Mava's status. In 1960, a new law greatly increased the council's powers and granted rights to international commercial interests in the islands, on the basis of recognised Atitlanese sovereignty and other economic concessions.
During the Atitlanese Civil War, the Mava Islands remained under loyalist monarchist control. Under the regime of General Alfredo Reyes, Mava was governed by a succession of military governors who largely abandoned any intent to accommodate indigenous needs. During World War III, small numbers of Maveans volunteered to fight in foreign regiments, partly to escape the Reyes regime and partly to contribute towards the fight against imperialist and fascist politics.


In 1961, the The Mava Organic Act provided a constitution for the islands, formalising its status as a unique territorial entity under Atitlanese sovereignty. The renamed Mava Council assumed full legislative independence in nearly all areas and in some foreign policy areas. The act also guaranteed Atitlanese rights to benefits certain economic resources, subject to international negotiations.  
Reyes' promotion of National Catholicism greatly alienated the largely Protestant indigenous population in Mava. Both the colonial government and the Catholic Church targeted non-Catholics in a campaign that claimed hundreds of lives. A confrontation between indigenous protestors and security forces in 1959 resulted in the deaths of 18 and the arrest of a further 30, a day now known in Mava and Atitlan as ''La tragedia del 3 de marzo''.


By the 1970s, mining became the predominant economic sector. Demographic change, prompted by the migration of speculators and commercial businesss, reduced the Maveans to a minority by the mid-1980s, dropping to 49.5% in the 1984 census, 45.2% in the 1989 census, and 37.1% in the 1994 census. Only in the 2014 census did native Maveans constitute over 40% of the population once again.
Although Reyes' regime encouraged imperialist ideals, it regarded Mava as a costly burden. Repeated confrontations between indigenous groups and colonial authorities, as well as a small minority of the reformist Kanisuat prompted the Atitlanese government to begin considering independence for the islands. The decision to grant the islands independence was finally made following two simultaneous attacks on Government House and a police station in Taalan, which claimed the life of both the governor and the deputy chief of police. For the first time, the colonial authorities met with representatives of the indigenous population through the long-underground GAKNM. An interim measure created a Transitional Congress of indigenous activists to negotiate Mava's future relationship with Atitlan and to create a new constitution.


==Geography==
During the late 1960s, the coming of independence politicised the division between the indigenous minority and the Kanisuat community. The Transitional Congress, being an indigenous-only body, disregarded the interests of the Kanisuat and also promoted policies detrimental to the Catholic Church, including a proposal to ban the church in an independent Mava. Under pressure from the Atitlanese government, now increasingly desperate to avoid any delay to independence through civil unrest in the islands, most of these proposals were dropped.
[[File:Mava Köppen.png|thumb|right|370px|Köppen climate types in Mava]]
The country comprises two main islands, Maava Illit (lit. "Great/Big Mava) and Maava Liteki (lit. "Little Mava"), which are separated by the Mava Strait, and the smaller Taak. Maava Illit is the largest of the island (1386 km<sup>2</sup>), followed by Maava Liteki (305 km<sup>2</sup>) and Taak (44 km<sup>2</sup>). Together, these islands and the surrounding rocks and islets make up the Mava Islands, for which the country is named. The two larger islands are characterised by their long east-to-west coastlines, with Mava being approximately 77 km long and 18 km wide. Maava Liteki is 11 km long and 4 km wide. The smallest of the main islands, Taak, is approximately 15 km long and 3 km wide.


Approximately 30 percent of Mava is covered in Magellanic subpolar forests, mostly in the south. The forests are home to a variety of flora. The southern beech (Nothofagus) is a common tree across the Mava islands. Because of the mostly untouched nature of many of these forests, a variety of animals have successfully established habitats. Amongst Mava's fauna include the Magellanic woodpecker, the Trianian sierra-finch, and the Trianian condor.
=== Independence ===
Mava gained independence on 1 March 1970. The constitution, which came into force on that day, was created in response to the National Catholicism of the Sarimiento regime and the discrimination that the indigenous community suffered. It entrenched the dominance of the indigenous community at the expense of the Kanisuat majority, whilst electoral regulations limited the Kanisuat franchise, requiring knowledge of the Mavean language and prohibiting voting rights for any person who had Atitlanese citizenship. This also affected the creole speakers in Kiurut. The [[List of political parties in Mava|Mavean National Party]] (KNM), founded in 1969 as a successor to the GAKNM, has governed the country in an unbroken series of governments since independence, running as a catch-all party for indigenous voters.
[[File:Mava independence day flag raising, 1970.png|left|thumb|The declaration of independence, 1970.]]
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, successive governments continued to enact policies limiting the rights and privileges of the Kanisuat majority. Affirmative action programs in education and employment favoured indigenous Maveans at the expense of the Kanisuat. These policies resulted in a level of self-segregation between the two communities, although large numbers of Kanisuat attempted to integrate themselves into indigenous culture by abandoning their Atitlanese citizenship and Almagrian language. Despite repeated protests, Atitlan did not intervene in order to protect vital economic, military, and other interests in the area, whilst opposition parties were too fractured to be an effective force against these policies..


===Climate===
Between the 1970s and the 1990s, a succession of opposition parties emerged to represent and advance the interests of the majority Kanisuat. The most prominent of these was the Democratic Party of the Mavean Islands, led by Juan Antonio Raapinsi. However, each party suffered from factionalism and internal splits which, combined with the ever-increasing number of parties vying for the Kanisuat vote, ensured that the KNM retained dominance.
Mava has a maritime climate, sitting in the transition region between the tundra (Köppen classifications ET) and subarctic zones (Cfc). The climate is characterised my a minimal temperature range across days and seasons. There is no marked wet and dry season, with the climate influenced by the cool ocean currents and southerly winds.


The average maximum temperature in January is around 12 °C (55 °F), whilst the July maximum average temperature drops to around 2 °C (35 °F). Average rainfall ranges from around 280-300mm in lowland areas to upwards of 1,500 mm in mountain terrain. Average rainfall is 890 mm. The weather is also characterised by humidity and high winds, the latter inspiring the name of the "Windy Islands". In wintertime, gales are particularly common. Despite the cold climate, snow is not common at any time of year, although it can appear in all months.
In 1997, President Kusipi Paiti promulgated a new constitution that addressed some of the concerns of the Kanisuat community. Amongst its provisions included removing constitutional references to "alien ideas and beliefs" and recognising Almagrian as an official language, along with Kiurut Creole as a regional language. Despite this, gerrymandering and other policies continue to benefit the indigenous community. It also established sustainability as a cornerstone of national life, renaming the state the 'Sustainable Republic of Mava' and requiring all state activity to comply with the three pillars of sustainability.


{{Weather box
In the 21st century, successive governments have promoted a more internationalist and multilateral approach to foreign policy. A thaw in relations with Atitlan, which were always conducted on the basis of necessity and extracting benefits from the other party, resulted in President Turaimi Ialan meeting Tlatoani Chimalpilli in Atlalilco in December 2004.  
| location = Mava
 
| metric first = yes
== Geography ==
| single line  = yes
The Mava Islands is formed of five main islands and a number of smaller rocks and islets, the largest being Kuhin. Each island is known by its Mavean-language name. The islands are Mava, Tariul, Luiva, Kiurut, and Lati. The capital and largest city, Taalan, is located on Mava, which is the largest and most populated of all the islands. The archipelago is situated in the Sarosan Ocean, close to the Trianian mainland.
| Jan record high C = 25.6
 
| Feb record high C = 23.4
The islands themselves are relatively flat, a with mountains formed through tectonic pressure in the centre of each island. There are a number of sea stacks off the coast of the islands, many of which are protected areas of natural beauty.
| Mar record high C = 22.1
 
| Apr record high C = 22.9
The total land area is 252.29 km<sup>2</sup> (97.41 sq mi), making it one of the smallest countries in the world.
| May record high C = 16.6
| Jun record high C = 14.3
| Jul record high C = 13.0
| Aug record high C = 14.8
| Sep record high C = 15.6
| Oct record high C = 18.0
| Nov record high C = 19.7
| Dec record high C = 21.9
| year record high C = 25.6
| Jan high C = 12.0
| Feb high C = 12.1
| Mar high C = 11.3
| Apr high C = 9.5
| May high C = 6.7
| Jun high C = 5.4
| Jul high C = 4.8
| Aug high C = 5.0
| Sep high C = 5.7
| Oct high C = 7.2
| Nov high C = 8.8
| Dec high C = 10.7
| year high C = 8.3
| Jan mean C = 8.2
| Feb mean C = 8.4
| Mar mean C = 7.7
| Apr mean C = 6.1
| May mean C = 3.8
| Jun mean C = 2.6
| Jul mean C = 2.0
| Aug mean C = 2.2
| Sep mean C = 2.7
| Oct mean C = 3.9
| Nov mean C = 5.2
| Dec mean C = 7.0
| year mean C = 5.0
| Jan low C = 4.5
| Feb low C = 4.7
| Mar low C = 4.0
| Apr low C = 2.8
| May low C = 1.0
| Jun low C = -0.1
| Jul low C = -0.7
| Aug low C = -0.6
| Sep low C = -0.4
| Oct low C = 0.5
| Nov low C = 1.7
| Dec low C = 3.4
| year low C = -0.7
| Jan record low C = -1.7
| Feb record low C = -1.2
| Mar record low C = -2.4
| Apr record low C = -4.6
| May record low C = -7.4
| Jun record low C = -8.7
| Jul record low C = -9.1
| Aug record low C = -9.7
| Sep record low C = -7.8
| Oct record low C = -5.3
| Nov record low C = -4.6
| Dec record low C = -3.5
| year record low C = -9.7
|precipitation colour = green
| Jan precipitation mm = 52.4
| Feb precipitation mm = 44.6
| Mar precipitation mm = 59.4
| Apr precipitation mm = 64.6
| May precipitation mm = 70.4
| Jun precipitation mm = 69.3
| Jul precipitation mm = 69.6
| Aug precipitation mm = 60.9
| Sep precipitation mm = 56.5
| Oct precipitation mm = 46.3
| Nov precipitation mm = 51.0
| Dec precipitation mm = 52.1
| year precipitation mm = 697.1
|unit precipitation days = 1.2 mm
| Jan precipitation days = 7.9
| Feb precipitation days = 7.3
| Mar precipitation days = 9.2
| Apr precipitation days = 9.7
| May precipitation days = 12.0
| Jun precipitation days = 10.7
| Jul precipitation days = 12.1
| Aug precipitation days = 9.7
| Sep precipitation days = 9.1
| Oct precipitation days = 8.1
| Nov precipitation days = 8.4
| Dec precipitation days = 9.1
| year precipitation days = 113.3
| Jan sun = 187.4
| Feb sun = 158.6
| Mar sun = 145.8
| Apr sun = 114.7
| May sun = 95.5
| Jun sun = 74.9
| Jul sun = 86.1
| Aug sun = 106.7
| Sep sun = 128.4
| Oct sun = 153.6
| Nov sun = 166.8
| Dec sun = 182.5
| year sun = 1601
| source 1 = Government of Mava
}}


==Government and politics==
The areas and populations (as of 2024) of the main islands are as follows:
{{main|Politics of Mava}}Based on the 1992 Law on the Governance of the Mava Islands (Almagrian: ''Ley de gobernanza de las islas Mava;'' LGIM'')'', Mava follows a non-partisan parliamentary system. Executive power is nominally vested in the federal government and devolved to the island. According to the LGIM, responsibility for the functioning of government is exercised by the Mava Islands Council, which elects the cabinet to manage day-to-day operations. Responsibility for the judiciary remains a federal matter.


The Mava Islands Council consists of 16 members, of which 14 are directly elected via plurality block voting. The remaining 2 members are the Financial Secretary and the Medical Officer of Health, who are ''ex officio'' members with speaking rights but who may not vote. Electors and candidates must be Atitlanese citizens resident in Mava for at least one year.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Name !! Area !! Population
|-
| Mava || 105.96 km<sup>2</sup>|| 27,499
|-
| Luiva || 21.89 km<sup>2</sup>|| 1,029
|-
| Tariul || 34.62 km<sup>2</sup>|| 2,179
|-
|Kiriut
|75.47 km<sup>2</sup>
|5,392
|-
|Lati
|14.35 km<sup>2</sup>
|1,203
|}


The council elects a speaker in the first sitting following an election. Whilst executive power is devolved to the council, in practice this is further delegated to the cabinet. The speaker calls for nominations for the Chief of Government; the candidate with a majority of votes is elected. The Chief of Government selects other councillors to form the cabinet.
=== Climate ===
The Mava Islands has an oceanic climate (Koppen: ''Cfb''), which is characterised by a narrow temperature range and frequent rainfall. The climate is cool, wet, and windy, with average high temperatures between 19 and 24 °C (66 °F and 75 °F) in summer, and between 9 and 14 °C (48 °F and 57 °F) in winter. Snowfall is rare, the last instance being recorded in March 2011.


==Economy==
{{Weather box
The economy of Mava is driven primarily by mining, oil, gas, and  mineral exploration, as well as arts, crafts, hunting, fishing, whaling, tourism, research, and education. Prior to the discovery of oil, the economy was "small, unmixed, and vulnerable." Today, the economy remains unmixed and is heavily dependent on mining. Polymetallic nodules are present in Mava's territorial waters, with the mining of nickel, copper, and molybdenum providing an important boost to the economy from the 1940s. Recent attempts have been made to phase out mining as a source of national income and to create a maritime reserve. The Mavean government committed to pursuing a path towards reducing its dependency on mining, although little progress has been made.
|location = Mava (1995–2021)
|metric first = Yes
|single line = Yes
|Jan high C = 18.2
|Feb high C = 18.4
|Mar high C = 18.2
|Apr high C = 15.1
|May high C = 13.0
|Jun high C = 11.0
|Jul high C = 10.3
|Aug high C = 11.0
|Sep high C = 12.2
|Oct high C = 13.5
|Nov high C = 15.0
|Dec high C = 16.8
| year high C = 14.4
|Jan mean C = 14.7
|Feb mean C = 15.1
|Mar mean C = 14.0
|Apr mean C = 12.1
|May mean C = 10.1
|Jun mean C = 8.3
|Jul mean C = 7.4
|Aug mean C = 8.0
|Sep mean C = 9.1
|Oct mean C = 10.1
|Nov mean C = 11.5
|Dec mean C = 13.4
| year mean C = 11.1
|Jan low C = 11.1
|Feb low C = 11.7
|Mar low C = 10.8
|Apr low C = 9.1
|May low C = 7.1
|Jun low C = 5.5
|Jul low C = 4.6
|Aug low C = 5.1
|Sep low C = 5.9
|Oct low C = 6.7
|Nov low C = 7.9
|Dec low C = 10.0
| year low C = 8.0
|rain colour = green
|Jan rain mm = 46.2
|Feb rain mm = 61.0
|Mar rain mm = 72.7
|Apr rain mm = 76.0
|May rain mm = 85.3
|Jun rain mm = 90.7
|Jul rain mm = 69.3
|Aug rain mm = 69.0
|Sep rain mm = 69.3
|Oct rain mm = 53.2
|Nov rain mm = 50.5
|Dec rain mm = 59.9
|year rain mm =
| Jan rain days = 6.0
| Feb rain days = 6.2
| Mar rain days = 7.8
| Apr rain days = 11.1
| May rain days = 13.8
| Jun rain days = 14.8
| Jul rain days = 14.7
| Aug rain days = 12.0
| Sep rain days = 11.2
| Oct rain days = 9.9
| Nov rain days = 7.8
| Dec rain days = 9.3
| unit rain days = 1.0 mm
| Jan humidity = 75.1
| Feb humidity = 77.5
| Mar humidity = 80.2
| Apr humidity = 81.0
| May humidity = 84.2
| Jun humidity = 85.7
| Jul humidity = 85.4
| Aug humidity = 82.5
| Sep humidity = 79.2
| Oct humidity = 76.9
| Nov humidity = 75.6
| Dec humidity = 75.8
|Jan sun = 187.3
|Feb sun = 141.5
|Mar sun = 120.2
|Apr sun = 102.3
|May sun = 77.2
|Jun sun = 57.8
|Jul sun = 70.4
|Aug sun = 97.0
|Sep sun = 105.1
|Oct sun = 125.7
|Nov sun = 141.9
|Dec sun = 160.0
|year sun = 1,386.4
|source 1 = UN Climate Data}}


Cod and salmon are important trading commodities among the native population and is their main employment and single largest source of income. Because of this dependence, the native economy is considered particularly vulnerable to changes in climate as well as competition from other nations. The largest single employer is ''Ikaamaayakii Siagakakak'' (National Fishing Company), which is a government-owned industry and employs between 25 and 35 percent of the native working population.  
==Politics==
{{Main|Politics of Mava}}
The 1997 constitution provides for a mixed presidential-parliamentary republic. The head of state and government is the [[President of Mava|president]], who is elected by the National Congress from amongst its members and who is dependent on Congress’ continued confidence. This process amended the previous method for electing the president, established in the 1976 constitution, which provided for direct elections. The president has both representative and political functions, and is also commander-in-chief of the Mava Military Corps.
[[File:Château-Lauratet.JPG|thumb|right|Palasi Saavajitiit is the residence of the President of Mava and the President's Office.]]
Executive power is vested in the government of Mava, which consists principally of the president and the President's Executive Council (the cabinet), which consists of the various departmental secretaries (ministers). The constitution requires that the president present his cabinet to Congress for its approval; members of Congress may either accept or reject the proposed cabinet as a whole and cannot reject individual executive nominees. When the president wields significant authority within Congress, this process is usually a formality, but weaker presidents are usually under greater pressure to follow Congress’ lead.


Other important industries include finance and business (10.7%), housing (8.1%), and hospitality (5.3%).
The [[Congress of Mava|National Congress of Mava]] is the country’s unicameral legislature, consisting of 51 members (National Representatives) elected by first-past-the post-every five years. At least ten percent of members of Congress must be women, although recent elections have consistently returned a far greater proportion. Whilst the constitution does not prescribe the manner in which the Congress elects the president, convention provides that each party or coalition nominates their respective leaders to a congressional vote. Usually, the leader of the largest party or coalition of parties is elected leader. Until 2021, presidential elections were held under secret ballot, but changes in the law now make each member of Congress vote public.


===Tourism===
The judiciary of Mava operates on a common law system and is independent of both the executive and the legislature. This common law system replace the previous judicial regime, which operated under civil law. The court of final appeal is the Supreme Court, which is principally responsible for ensuring that decisions by lower courts are constitutional and do not infringe on fundamental rights and freedoms enshrined in the constitution. All lower courts are divided into two benches: the State Bench, which addresses cases concerning the state, and the Common Bench, which hears cases between individuals and non-state parties. The vast majority of cases are tried in the latter. The Supreme Court hears appeals from both benches. All but one president have previously worked within the judiciary, and thus in all three branches of government.
Tourism in Mava was undeveloped until relatively recently. Mava has become an increasingly popular tourist attraction for wildlife watching, outdoor activities, and cultural attractions. There are a number of rivers running across the islands that offer opportunities for canoeing and kayaking, prompting the growth of a new service indutry. Hiking and camping is also a popular pursuit. In 2019, the Mava Tourist Board released a campaign called "roughing it", which encouraged adventurers to visit Mava.


Despite its growth in recent years, tourism in Mava remains comparatively low. In 2020 the government reported that tourism numbers for the period 2018-2019 stood at approximately 9,000, an increase from around 2,000 a decade earlier. Despite its recent emphasis on tourism as a source of national income, the government's annual economic report revealed that tourism accounts for only around 1.9 percent of the national economy.
Although a majority of the population are Kanisuat, politics is dominated by the fully-indigenous Mavean community. Political scientists and observers have characterised the Mavean government as a de facto ethnocratic democracy due to this dominance. As of 2024, no Kanisuat Mavean has been elected to the presidency, whilst only one has been elected speaker of Congress. Political scientist Miguel Sanchez argues that the indigenous minority, which is largely Protestant, has politicised the Kanisuat majority's Catholicism as indicative of a 'colonialist, alien mindset.' He adds that the Catholic Church's history as a supporter of Atitlanese colonialism and its historic penalisation of Protestantism plays a large part in this division. Because of this situation, Mava has been described as an anocracy. Various policies, including a disproportionate number of seats allocated to the outer islands, has ensured the continued political dominance of the indigenous minority.


The majority of tourists arrive by cruise ship, docking in Paas Harbour.
===Military===
[[File:CLT-2 takes grenade range on PTA 140720-M-LV138-644.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Soldiers of the Ground Force during a training exercise in Atitlan.]]
Responsibility for military defence is with the Sustainable Republic of Mava Defence Forces (Mavean: ''Tuliganitaat Saapijut ngat Mava Repalik Aituniajiin''; Almagrian: ''Fuerzas de Defensa de la República Sostenible de Mava''), which is responsible for defending the islands’ territorial integrity, including its waters and airspace. The corps is made up of two branches: the Land Defence Force and the Sea Defence Force. There is also an Air Defence Squadron that operates as an autonomous branch of the Land Defence Force. Each branch is governed by a military staff which, along with the Air Defence Squadron Command, forms the Defence Forces General Staff.


===Transport===
Overall command of the Defence Forces is formally vested in the President as Commander-in-Chief, who delegates his authority to the Secretary of the Department of Defence and National Security. The constitution requires that the Defence Forces be under civilian control. Neither the president nor an executive secretary cannot be a serving member of any organisation under the authority of the ministry.
[[File:The Resolute Bay Airport.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Paas International Airport]]
There is one airport that provides air transport between Mava and other nations: Paas International Airport. The two airports cater to international flights, the latter focussing on destinations in mainland Triania. There is also bat traffic that links Mava with continental Triania. Roads are largely concentrated in the north of Mava Island, where the majority of settlements are based and where the land is generally flatter. Roads generally link urban areas, with few country roads due to the lack of countryside activities and hostile climate. The island of Tokuksiagak has one main road that links the town of Aripmek to the harbour.


Beginning in the 1950s, a number of roads have been constructed in the south of Mava Island, with the Mava Ring Road following the coastline along the north, east, and south of the island.
In times of peace, the defence forces provides support to the [[Mava Constabulary Force]] and other government departments and agencies as required. This includes fighting against illicit drug trafficking, illegal immigration, and illegal fishing operations; operating search and rescue services; maintaining public order; protecting VIPs; and also providing a ceremonial guard on state occasions.


The Pekinerasartok Harbour is the main harbour, providing sea access for civil and government vessels. The Harbour is an important import/export hub, and also links Mava with the Outer Islands. The habour is overseen by the Pekinerasartok Harbour Authority, which enforces law through a specialist Pekinerasartok Harbour Police Force. There are also ports in Pmaak and Miilep.
=== Administrative divisions ===
On independence in 1970, each of the main five islands was granted provincial status, further divided into fourteen districts. Since the adoption of a new constitution in 1997, Mava Province was abolished and replaced with two new provinces: Taalan and Kuiti, each further divided into two districts. Each province has its own appointed governor and directly-elected council, responsible for the management of local land and the provision of public services.


===Energy===
[[File:Administrative divisions of Mava.png|frameless|420px|center]]
Beginning in the 21st century, the government has sought to replace the use of fossil fuels with renewable energy sources. The primary focus is on windpower, taking advantage of the natural climate. In 2013, five 330 kW turbines were installed on the outskirts of Paas. In 2018, three offshore turbines were installed. As of 2023, there is limited capacity to store surplus wind energy, with an underdeveloped battery storage system.


==Demographics==
==Demographics==
Mava has a population of 4,713 (2021 estimate), up from 4,529 according to the 2011 census. The majority are classified as "settler or settler-descendant," with 61.6% of the population being ethnic Mavean. Under laws dating back to the 1930s that still remain in force, a person may claim to be an ethnic Mavean if at least five pairs of their eight great-grandparents are Mavean.
{{Historical populations|1972|20033|1977|21961|1982|23133|1987|24859|1992|25888|1997|26917|2002|29532|2007|31260|2012|34253|2017|35902|2022|37302|percentages=pagr|align=left}}
{{Pie chart
The total population of Mava was 37,302 in the 2022 census. Of this total, around 29,000 live on the island of Mava and the remaining number on a number of smaller islands. The natural population increase is about 1,400 people a year on average.
| caption = Ethnic groups (2016)
 
| other =  
Over half of all residents are officially of mixed heritage, the vast majority being mixed indigenous-Atitlanese, known as Kanisuat. Persons formally registered as "whole indigenous" (formerly known as "unadulterated native") account for over a third of the population and are the second largest ethnic group. Around 10 percent of the population, the majority of whom are first or second generation Maveans, belong to other ethnic groups and are concentrated in and around the capital.
| label1 = Mavean
 
| value1 = 61.6
=== Ethnic groups ===
| color1 = darkred
The majority of Mava's population are mixed race (52.1 percent), most of these being mixed Mavean-Atitlanese (approximately 95 percent of the total mixed population). The degree to which this mixed ethnic group identifies as Mavean or as another ethnicity is difficult to determine, due to the indigenous community labelling the whole group as ''kanisuat'' (lit. part pure). The next largest group are indigenous Maveans (35.8 percent). According to law, an individual is indigenous Mavean if at least five of their eight grandparents were indigenous. Indigenous Maveans predominate in the outer islands, whilst the kanisuat mostly live on Mava Island, particularly in Taalan.
| label2 = Atitlanese
| value2 = 15.4
| color2 = wheat
| label3 = Gavirians
| value3 = 10.3
| color3 = #ccf
| label4 = Tsaborite
| value4 = 6.7
| color4 = goldenrod
| label5 = Musashi
| value5 = 2.1
| color5 = #8e91d6
| label6 = Salmurian
| value6 = 0.7
| color6 = #2b864e
}}
Ethnic Atitlanese constitute the largest non-Mavean group, mostly descending from colonial-era settlers. Gavirians represent the second-largest group, with 10.3% of the population descending part or full Gavirian ancestry. Tsaborites represent the third-largest group (6.7%).


The population has remained stable for most of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. However, limited prospects and educational opportunities have resulted in many Maveans migrating to Atitlan proper (approximately 200 doing so in 2011-15).
Other ethnic groups include Atitlanese (5.2 percent), Ibarmentudiak (1.7 percent), Daojingese (0.9 percent), Gavirian (0.7 percent), Anglian (0.5 percent), Morioran (0.2 percent), and small numbers of other groups (0.2 percent).  


===Languages===
===Languages===
The most spoken language spoken in Mavean, a Trianian language considered to be vulnerable due to a speaking population of only around 25,000 people. Almagrian is a co-official language, but retains only formal recognition and is limited to a small Atitlanese community. Anglish is also widespread and is taught alongside Almagrian as part of foreign languages lessons in schools.
===Religion===
{{bar box
{{bar box
| title=Mava religiosity
|title=Primary languages in Mava
| titlebar=#ddd
|titlebar=#ddd
| left1='''Religion'''
|shading    = off
| right1='''Percentage'''
|left1=Languages
| float=right
|right1=percent
| bars=
|float=right
{{bar percent|Christianity|blue|92}}
|bars=
{{bar percent|Indigenous beliefs|pink|5}}
{{bar percent|Mavean|blue|63.2}}
{{bar percent|Others|gray|2}}
{{bar percent|Almagrian|green|32.5}}
{{bar percent|None|red|1}}
{{bar percent|Anglish|orange|2.4}}
{{bar percent|Kiurut Creole|skyblue|0.9}}
{{bar percent|Daojingese|maroon|0.4}}
{{bar percent|Ibarmetudiak|red|0.3}}
{{bar percent|Other|purple|0.3}}
}}
}}
The predominant religion in Mava is Christianity, with the majority of practitioners (52 percent) being Roman Catholic. Roman Catholicism was introduced by Atitlanese colonists in the nineteenth century, and promoted amongst the indigenous population by missionaries. Today, indigenous and settlers are mostly Catholic, which has aided in encouraging dialogue between the two groups.
Mavean and Almagrian are the co-official languages of Mava. Mavean, which is also designated the country's national language, is spoken by about 80.1 percent of the population, although only around 63.2 percent speak it as their primary language. Almagrian, introduced to the islands by Atitlan and spoken there since the 16th century, is widely understood but is fluently spoken by only around 32.5 percent of the population as a first language.
 
Other languages spoken in Mava include Anglish (2.4 percent), Kiurut Creole (0.9 percent), and a number of other immigrant languages. Almagrian and Anglish are the most commonly taught foreign languages in schools.
 
=== Religion ===
According to the 2022 census, most Maveans are Christians: 87.3 percent recorded Christianity as their faith. Catholics are by far the largest religious group, with 58.1 percent of Mavean Christians belonging to the Roman Catholic Church, the remainder belonging to Protestant (39.4 percent) and other churches (2.5 percent). Catholics are pastorally served by the Diocese of Taalan.
[[File:Ile_de_Mahe_-_Victoria_(9).JPG|thumb|left|Taalan is the capital and largest city in Mava, with a population of around 12,000 people (over 40 percent of the country's population).]]
The next largest religious group belong to a selection of folk religious organisations, although many of these groups are nominally Catholic in many of their practises. 5.1 percent of the population declared no religion, the largest proportion since records began.
 
Other religions in the islands include Buddhism (2.1 percent) and Islam (1.3 percent). There is no state religion and the constitution guarantees protections for all faith groups.
 
Although Catholicism is the single largest religious group, Protestants have dominated Mavean politics since independence. This is largely attributable to the political dominance of the largely-Protestant fully indigenous Mavean population, many of whom reject Catholicism as colonial.
 
=== Education ===
Primary and secondary education is free and compulsory in Mava, with children required to attend school from the age of five to sixteen. Until recently, the majority of schools were private, most commonly mission schools run by Atitlanese Catholic missionaries. In 2000, almost 70 percent of primary schools and around 50 percent of secondary schools were mission schools. Since the beginning of the 2010s, these schools have been incorporated into the state-run school system, although most have retained their religious character and administration.
 
There are only two tertiary education institutions in Mava. The University of the Republic (Mavean: ''Repalik ngat Siattarlijuat''), formerly the Royal Institute of Higher Education, is the sole university in the country. The National Institute for Science, Engineering, and Technology was established by state charter in 2004 to provide specialised education in STEM subjects. A large number of students travel overseas for university education, especially those seeking medical training.
 
== Economy ==
The nominal GDP per capital in 2023 was $5,907, with a total GDP of $220.342 million, making Mava among the poorest countries in the world. However, adjusted to take into account purchasing power, per capita wealth was $11,203, with most wealth concentrated on the main island of Mava. The majority of islanders (82 percent) are in the labour force, most of whom were in formal employment. Home production and subsistence work constitutes a large part of the workforce, with between 5 and 20 percent of the population recorded as employed in this sector, depending on the data compiled.
[[File:In the city center, the new marketplace bustles with activity..jpg|thumb|275px|right|A market in Taalan. Markets remain the most common place to purchase food, clothes, and other necessities.]]
Mava has an above-average percentage of the population in work. This is partly due to many working in the home and in semi-informal employment, but also because of a culture that emphasises work ethic and contribution to the wider community. Consequently, large numbers of older people continue in work after they become eligible for retirement.
 
=== Transport ===
Public buses are free of charge for students, the disabled, and senior citizens, a policy introduced in 2018. There is currently one express railway that links Taalan with a number of other smaller towns and villages; there was previously another privately-owned railway, but this has since been decommissioned after the managing company fell into bankruptcy.
 
The harbour of Taalan handles a large part of the islands' international trade, and also serves as a cruise terminal. The habour and the nearby Taalan International Airport handles tens of thousands of inbound journeys every year and are policed by a specialist police force.
 
Travel between islands is only possible by boat. A boat service managed by the Ministry of Transport provides regular trips between a number of islands, with private companies providing services where the ministry does not. Since 1992, there have been repeated attempts to build a second airport outside of Mava Island, although finance and political infighting have repeatedly held back the proposal.
 
=== Agriculture ===
Agriculture in Mava continues to be an important part of the islands' economy, even though recent efforts to diversify the economy and the importing of new foods and supplies have seen domestic agricultural production decline as a share of GDP. Agricultural land covers approximately 20 percent of Mava's land and employs around 9 percent of the population. In 2023, agriculture generated around 7 percent of GDP - a decline from 16 percent in 1993 - but continues to be the islands' main export.
 
There are around 30 independent farms in Mava, of which 10 are professional. Most are less than 2 hectare in size, with the vast majority being run by individual farmers, mostly between the ages of 40 and 59 years old.


A number of Protestant and other Christian groups (including Orthodox) groups also exist on the islands, believed to have emerged out of Protestant émigrés escaping persecution, and which have since been added to by commercial and other forms of immigration. The majority of Protestants belong to a uniting church.
=== Tourism ===
[[File:Pyramid & Rangatira Islands Chatham Islands New Zealand Aotearoa.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Mavean landscapes are an important draw for many tourists.]]
Mava has a modest but growing tourism industry. The Ministry of Culture and Tourism reported 37,382 annual visitors from 2011-2018. In 2019, a 1,000 unit resort was constructed in a partnership between Mava and Atitlan, with the government aiming to increase the number of annual visitors to 50,000 by 2050 (known as the '50-50 Goal'). The development of tourism has become an important part of the islands' economy, and has fuelled further economic growth through direct and indirect employment and income generation for related industries.


===Education===
The Mavean government has introduced several policies to encourage tourism. Visitors to Mava do not require a visa pre-arrival, provided that they have a valid passport, proof of return travel, and enough money to be self-sufficient whilst in the country. The Taalan International Airport, which was modernised in 2011-12, welcomes the vast majority of visitors. Plans for a second airport for local travel are currently being debated in Congress.
Education is free and compulsory for all people between the ages of 6 and 16. It consists of five years of primary education, three years of lower secondary education, and two years of higher secondary education. It is publicly funded through a mixture of government funds and Atitlanese subsidies and is free of charge to students.


There is no provision for further or higher education on the islands. Students seeking post-16 studies have to travel abroad, with Atitlan and Zyang the most common destinations.
=== Currency ===
The Mavean pauna (ISO 4217 code: ''MVP'') was introduced in 1975, replacing the Atitlanese peso at par. The peso continued as an official currency until 1983. Although the peso is not an officially circulating currency in the islands, the Mavean economy's integration with that of Atitlan and the pauna being pegged at par with the peso means that Atitlanese coins and banknotes remain generally accepted throughout the islands.


Culturally, Maveans hold education and scholarship in high esteem, with a number of prominent Mavean academics and researchers considered important figures. The National Library of Mava, in Paas, serves as a repository for all doctoral and master's dissertations written by Maveans in any country, as well as scholarly publications by or about Maveans. This is publicly available free of charge.
The pauna does not have an official symbol. In official documents, the symbol "P." is used. Other versions include "MVP" and "MP" in contexts where there is need to distinguish from other currencies. The pauna is divided into 100 nenutait (singular: nenut), although nenut coins are not commonly used. The Republic of Mava Currency Board issues coins and banknotes. Commemorative coins, which are not intended for circulation, are also issued for collectors.


==Culture==
== Culture ==
===Storytelling and literature===
Mavean culture has long been influenced by its neighbours as well as colonial, mercantile, and missionary settlers.
Storytelling forms an important part of Mavean culture, with the passing of tales from one generation to the next a common way of establishing strong links between elders and youth. This form of storytelling, called ''Okiigoat Kahaatu'' (lit. "Warn Telling") originated in the warnings given to adolescents about the threats they may face, but evolved into a broader type of group activity. Different orators tell different stories, but a number of common themes run through most: a young person entering into the adult world, an individual/animal/spirit trying to lead them astray, and the realisation that they were being led astray.


Several of these stories have been recorded and compiled into published works. Some of these have become internationally known, including ''Koeaatowurah'', and have brought Mavean culture to foreign audiences.
Historians divide Mava's cultural development into three distinct periods: pre-colonial, colonial, and modern. Prior to Atitlanese colonisation, Maveans practised a variety of different cultures on each of the islands of the archipelago, each being regional variants of a broader norm that were influenced by migration between the islands. The Atitlanese brought with them their own culture and traditions, as well as Protestant missionaries from their own respective nations. For much of the colonial period, the colonial government sought to suppress and replace indigenous culture with its own Catholic-dominated practices, often vying for influence with Protestant missions. The most prominent aspects of this cultural colonialism include the foundation of a number of churches and cathedrals on all the main islands, replacing native names with Atitlanese and Almagrian names, and the installation of a local elite socialised into Atitlanese culture and identity.


===Cuisine===
Beginning in the 1920s, the suppression of local identities slowly began to turn into accommodation. However, this was reversed during the Sarimiento regime. On independence, the indigenous minority ended the preeminance of the Kanisaut elite and promoted the "Maveanisation" of the islands - including policies that encouraged the adoption of indigenous names; the renaming of buildings, towns, and roads; and the suppression of the Kanisaut political voice.
The Mavean diet consists largely of meat from marine mammals, fish, and birds. Because of the lack of arable land and the country's geography, much of Mavea's diety is derived from the ocean. The national dish is the ''tupiril pnaa'' ("second duck"), which emerged from the use of leftover roasted meat from the pintail.  


Fish is a common ingredient. Popular fish used in Mavean dishes include the zebra trout and the spotted minnow, both of which are commonly used in breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Until 1998, otter meat was a commonly used ingredient, but an effort to protect them, as well as its adoption as Mava's national animal, led to a significant reduction in the consumption of otter. In 2016, the buying, butchering, and selling of otter meat was made illegal.
However, the political divide between the indigenous and Kanisaut communities and the resultant self-segregation between many in the two communities has not prevented cultural mixing. Both groups continue to share their cultures and fuse practices from the other group with their own, with a new "fused" generation promoting more amiable relations between the two communities.


===Sport===
=== Health ===
Maveans consider sport an important part of their culture, being amongst the most active populations in the world. Popular sports include football, track and field, canoeing, shooting, and, skiing. Sporting is overseen by ''Haukaaqa Maava'' ("Sport Mava"), a public body sponsored by the government and which oversees and implements policies relating to sporting.
[[File:US Navy 100727-N-7478G-509 Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Florencio Stamberger cleans a Palauan resident's teeth at a free dental clinic supporting Pacific Partnership 2010 in Koror, Palau.jpg|250px|thumb|A Mavean dentist working at a pop-up surgery, 2009.]]
The under-five mortality rate in 2018 was 29.4 per 1000, whilst the infant mortality rate generally was 20.3 per 1000. Since 2000, successive governments have introduced efforts to expand vaccination to all children. Between 2000 and 2020, the proportion of infants who were not vaccinated declined from around half to one in five, although the expansion of vaccination programs into outlying islands continues to face difficulties. Nutrition programs and education, partly funded and sponsored by international aid, has improved understanding of a balanced diet and limited the widespread consumption of sugar and other unhealthy foods.


Because of its geography and climate, winter sports are common across the country. Skiing is widely considered the national sport, with fishing, snowboarding, luge, and bobsleigh common across generations. Although the environment is not generally suited to them, sports such as golf, tennis, and surfing are present and of increasing popularity.
Extreme poverty continues to be a problem, particularly for rural communities whose lifestyles are based on a subsistence existence. Since 1979, there has been a universal healthcare system that has worked to expand access to healthcare among the poorest.


===Media===
=== Women's rights ===
Mava Council's communities department is responsible for overseeing and regulating media and broadcasting. There are two newspapers circulating on the island: ''Uujutajap Paas Kamaqjuukutnik'' (Kamaqjuukut's Paas Newspaper), which is published daily, and ''Kiiyiptuumilik Tuumilikip'' (Swift Flash), published weekly. Television, radio, and internet media services are provided by Atitlanese providers.
Women continue to face difficulties in society not experienced by men. Mavean culture historically placed much emphasis on a positive and active role for women in society, but Atitlanese colonial policies, supported by the Catholic Church, imposed severe limitations on women. Today, Mavean society continues to struggle with high rates of femicide and gender-based violence, despite successive laws enacted to increase the severity of such crimes.


==See also==
Beginning in the 2000s, women have achieved greater influence in politics. As of 2022, 29 percent of seats in Congress are held by women, with proposals for a quota for elected female representatives receiving support from many in congress.
* [[Politics of Mava]]
* [[Law enforcement in Mava]]


==Notes==
=== Sports ===
{{notelist}}
Football is the most popular sport in Mava. The national team is the Mava national football team. Other popular sports include basketball and rugby.
{{reflist|group=note}}


==External links==
== See also ==
* [https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ Mava]. ''The Global Factbook''. United Nations
* [[President of Mava]]
* [[National Congress of Mava]]
* [[Orders, decorations, and medals of Mava]]


== Notes ==
{{notelist}}
{{Elezia}}
{{Elezia}}
[[Category:Mava]]
[[Category:Mava]]
[[Category:Countries in Elezia]]

Latest revision as of 19:29, 13 February 2025

Sustainable Republic of Mava
Mava Repalik Aituniajiin (Mavean)
República Sostenible de Mava (Almagrian)
Repulika Aisteniale de Mava (Kiurut Creole)
Seal of Mava
Seal
Motto: Aat maujut autait kaini haat guan nisanutinni (Mavean)
"The ten righteous men are found here"
Anthem: Mava Tuvit
"Our Mava"
Location of Mava in the Sarosan Ocean
Location of Mava in the Sarosan Ocean
Capital
and largest city
Taalan
Administrative centerKuatni[a]
Official languages
  • Mavean
  • Almagrian
Recognised regional languagesKiurut Creolea
Ethnic groups
(2022)
52.1% mixed
38.5% indigenous
9.4% other
Religion
(2022)
87.3% Christianity
5.1% no religion
3.2% folk religion
4.4% other
Demonym(s)Mavean
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidency
Maak Juaija
• Senior Secretary & Secretary in the President's Office
Maak Juaija
• Speaker of Congress
Taama Iativut
LegislatureNational Congress
Independence from Atitlan
• Independence declared
1 March 1970
• Current constitution
18 August 1997
Area
• Total
252.29 km2 (97.41 sq mi)
• Water (%)
negligible
Population
• 2024 estimate
37,302
• Density
172.3/km2 (446.3/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$421.587 million
• Per capita
$11,203
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$220.342 million
• Per capita
$5,907
Gini (2023)Positive decrease 39.2
medium
HDI (2023)Increase 0.657
medium
CurrencyPauna (MVP)
Time zoneUTC-9 (MVT)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy
Driving sideright
Internet TLD.mv
  1. Also known as "Almagro-Mavean"

Mava (/mɑːvə/), officially the Sustainable Republic of Mava (Mavean: Mava Repalik Aituniajiin; Almagrian: República Sostenible de Mava; Kiurut Creole: Repulika Aisteniale de Mava), sometimes known by the acronym SRM or MRA, is an island country and archipelagic state in the Sarosan Ocean. It consists of a group of islands, the largest and most populous of which is Mava, from which the country derives its name. With an estimated population of around 28,000 people (as of 2024) and a total land area of approximately 252 square kilometres, Mava is one of the smallest and least-populous countries in the world.

Mava was sparsely inhabited prior to colonial contact in the 16th century. In the late 18th century, Atitlan formally colonised the islands, annexing them into Atitlan proper in 1871. The islands gained independence in 1970. Since independence, the islands have transitioned from an agricultural society to a more diversified service-based economy, characterised by the public sector and tourism. Since 1989, nominal GDP has grown consistently, with downturns only in 1998-2000 and 2010-13. In recent years, foreign direct investment has grown as successive governments have pursued liberal economic policies.

Since independence, Mava has enjoyed a stable democratic system, although Atitlan continues to have a significant impact on Mavean politics through the close relations between the two governments and Atitlan's economic investment in the islands. According to a 2020 International Democracy Index report, Mava is a "party-free" nation, with fundamental freedoms respected but a political process inaccessible for large parts of the population.

The majority of people of Mava trace at least part of their ancestry to the indigenous Trianian, belonging to the Paatuvit tribe that inhabited western Triania who eventually expanded to and then concentrated around the islands of the Sarosan Ocean. Most, however, are of mixed heritage (kanisuat), also possessing Atitlanese ancestry. Atitlanese influences also extend to religion, with most practising Catholicism, and is furthe evident in Mava's culture, customs, music, and politics, which combine native and Atitlanese influences. The country is a member of the United Nations and the Federated Island League of Elezia.

History

Early 20th century

With the decline of the Atitlanese Empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and the gradual loss of many of its colonies, there was a rise in political consciousness in Mava. Amongst the Kanisuat community, which had long dominated political and economic life, there were concerns that possible independence may undermine their position. For indigenous Maveans, news of Atitlan's imperial decline inspired political activism, resulting in the formation of the Mavean National Committee for Political Change (GAKNM). The lack of voice for indigenous Maveans and the pressure that the GAKNM placed on the government for redress resulted in the creation of a new advisory council in 1922.

During the Atitlanese Civil War, the Mava Islands remained under loyalist monarchist control. Under the regime of General Alfredo Reyes, Mava was governed by a succession of military governors who largely abandoned any intent to accommodate indigenous needs. During World War III, small numbers of Maveans volunteered to fight in foreign regiments, partly to escape the Reyes regime and partly to contribute towards the fight against imperialist and fascist politics.

Reyes' promotion of National Catholicism greatly alienated the largely Protestant indigenous population in Mava. Both the colonial government and the Catholic Church targeted non-Catholics in a campaign that claimed hundreds of lives. A confrontation between indigenous protestors and security forces in 1959 resulted in the deaths of 18 and the arrest of a further 30, a day now known in Mava and Atitlan as La tragedia del 3 de marzo.

Although Reyes' regime encouraged imperialist ideals, it regarded Mava as a costly burden. Repeated confrontations between indigenous groups and colonial authorities, as well as a small minority of the reformist Kanisuat prompted the Atitlanese government to begin considering independence for the islands. The decision to grant the islands independence was finally made following two simultaneous attacks on Government House and a police station in Taalan, which claimed the life of both the governor and the deputy chief of police. For the first time, the colonial authorities met with representatives of the indigenous population through the long-underground GAKNM. An interim measure created a Transitional Congress of indigenous activists to negotiate Mava's future relationship with Atitlan and to create a new constitution.

During the late 1960s, the coming of independence politicised the division between the indigenous minority and the Kanisuat community. The Transitional Congress, being an indigenous-only body, disregarded the interests of the Kanisuat and also promoted policies detrimental to the Catholic Church, including a proposal to ban the church in an independent Mava. Under pressure from the Atitlanese government, now increasingly desperate to avoid any delay to independence through civil unrest in the islands, most of these proposals were dropped.

Independence

Mava gained independence on 1 March 1970. The constitution, which came into force on that day, was created in response to the National Catholicism of the Sarimiento regime and the discrimination that the indigenous community suffered. It entrenched the dominance of the indigenous community at the expense of the Kanisuat majority, whilst electoral regulations limited the Kanisuat franchise, requiring knowledge of the Mavean language and prohibiting voting rights for any person who had Atitlanese citizenship. This also affected the creole speakers in Kiurut. The Mavean National Party (KNM), founded in 1969 as a successor to the GAKNM, has governed the country in an unbroken series of governments since independence, running as a catch-all party for indigenous voters.

The declaration of independence, 1970.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, successive governments continued to enact policies limiting the rights and privileges of the Kanisuat majority. Affirmative action programs in education and employment favoured indigenous Maveans at the expense of the Kanisuat. These policies resulted in a level of self-segregation between the two communities, although large numbers of Kanisuat attempted to integrate themselves into indigenous culture by abandoning their Atitlanese citizenship and Almagrian language. Despite repeated protests, Atitlan did not intervene in order to protect vital economic, military, and other interests in the area, whilst opposition parties were too fractured to be an effective force against these policies..

Between the 1970s and the 1990s, a succession of opposition parties emerged to represent and advance the interests of the majority Kanisuat. The most prominent of these was the Democratic Party of the Mavean Islands, led by Juan Antonio Raapinsi. However, each party suffered from factionalism and internal splits which, combined with the ever-increasing number of parties vying for the Kanisuat vote, ensured that the KNM retained dominance.

In 1997, President Kusipi Paiti promulgated a new constitution that addressed some of the concerns of the Kanisuat community. Amongst its provisions included removing constitutional references to "alien ideas and beliefs" and recognising Almagrian as an official language, along with Kiurut Creole as a regional language. Despite this, gerrymandering and other policies continue to benefit the indigenous community. It also established sustainability as a cornerstone of national life, renaming the state the 'Sustainable Republic of Mava' and requiring all state activity to comply with the three pillars of sustainability.

In the 21st century, successive governments have promoted a more internationalist and multilateral approach to foreign policy. A thaw in relations with Atitlan, which were always conducted on the basis of necessity and extracting benefits from the other party, resulted in President Turaimi Ialan meeting Tlatoani Chimalpilli in Atlalilco in December 2004.

Geography

The Mava Islands is formed of five main islands and a number of smaller rocks and islets, the largest being Kuhin. Each island is known by its Mavean-language name. The islands are Mava, Tariul, Luiva, Kiurut, and Lati. The capital and largest city, Taalan, is located on Mava, which is the largest and most populated of all the islands. The archipelago is situated in the Sarosan Ocean, close to the Trianian mainland.

The islands themselves are relatively flat, a with mountains formed through tectonic pressure in the centre of each island. There are a number of sea stacks off the coast of the islands, many of which are protected areas of natural beauty.

The total land area is 252.29 km2 (97.41 sq mi), making it one of the smallest countries in the world.

The areas and populations (as of 2024) of the main islands are as follows:

Name Area Population
Mava 105.96 km2 27,499
Luiva 21.89 km2 1,029
Tariul 34.62 km2 2,179
Kiriut 75.47 km2 5,392
Lati 14.35 km2 1,203

Climate

The Mava Islands has an oceanic climate (Koppen: Cfb), which is characterised by a narrow temperature range and frequent rainfall. The climate is cool, wet, and windy, with average high temperatures between 19 and 24 °C (66 °F and 75 °F) in summer, and between 9 and 14 °C (48 °F and 57 °F) in winter. Snowfall is rare, the last instance being recorded in March 2011.

Climate data for Mava (1995–2021)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 18.2
(64.8)
18.4
(65.1)
18.2
(64.8)
15.1
(59.2)
13.0
(55.4)
11.0
(51.8)
10.3
(50.5)
11.0
(51.8)
12.2
(54.0)
13.5
(56.3)
15.0
(59.0)
16.8
(62.2)
14.4
(57.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) 14.7
(58.5)
15.1
(59.2)
14.0
(57.2)
12.1
(53.8)
10.1
(50.2)
8.3
(46.9)
7.4
(45.3)
8.0
(46.4)
9.1
(48.4)
10.1
(50.2)
11.5
(52.7)
13.4
(56.1)
11.1
(52.0)
Average low °C (°F) 11.1
(52.0)
11.7
(53.1)
10.8
(51.4)
9.1
(48.4)
7.1
(44.8)
5.5
(41.9)
4.6
(40.3)
5.1
(41.2)
5.9
(42.6)
6.7
(44.1)
7.9
(46.2)
10.0
(50.0)
8.0
(46.4)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 46.2
(1.82)
61.0
(2.40)
72.7
(2.86)
76.0
(2.99)
85.3
(3.36)
90.7
(3.57)
69.3
(2.73)
69.0
(2.72)
69.3
(2.73)
53.2
(2.09)
50.5
(1.99)
59.9
(2.36)
803.1
(31.62)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 6.0 6.2 7.8 11.1 13.8 14.8 14.7 12.0 11.2 9.9 7.8 9.3 124.6
Average relative humidity (%) 75.1 77.5 80.2 81.0 84.2 85.7 85.4 82.5 79.2 76.9 75.6 75.8 79.9
Mean monthly sunshine hours 187.3 141.5 120.2 102.3 77.2 57.8 70.4 97.0 105.1 125.7 141.9 160.0 1,386.4
Source: UN Climate Data

Politics

The 1997 constitution provides for a mixed presidential-parliamentary republic. The head of state and government is the president, who is elected by the National Congress from amongst its members and who is dependent on Congress’ continued confidence. This process amended the previous method for electing the president, established in the 1976 constitution, which provided for direct elections. The president has both representative and political functions, and is also commander-in-chief of the Mava Military Corps.

Palasi Saavajitiit is the residence of the President of Mava and the President's Office.

Executive power is vested in the government of Mava, which consists principally of the president and the President's Executive Council (the cabinet), which consists of the various departmental secretaries (ministers). The constitution requires that the president present his cabinet to Congress for its approval; members of Congress may either accept or reject the proposed cabinet as a whole and cannot reject individual executive nominees. When the president wields significant authority within Congress, this process is usually a formality, but weaker presidents are usually under greater pressure to follow Congress’ lead.

The National Congress of Mava is the country’s unicameral legislature, consisting of 51 members (National Representatives) elected by first-past-the post-every five years. At least ten percent of members of Congress must be women, although recent elections have consistently returned a far greater proportion. Whilst the constitution does not prescribe the manner in which the Congress elects the president, convention provides that each party or coalition nominates their respective leaders to a congressional vote. Usually, the leader of the largest party or coalition of parties is elected leader. Until 2021, presidential elections were held under secret ballot, but changes in the law now make each member of Congress vote public.

The judiciary of Mava operates on a common law system and is independent of both the executive and the legislature. This common law system replace the previous judicial regime, which operated under civil law. The court of final appeal is the Supreme Court, which is principally responsible for ensuring that decisions by lower courts are constitutional and do not infringe on fundamental rights and freedoms enshrined in the constitution. All lower courts are divided into two benches: the State Bench, which addresses cases concerning the state, and the Common Bench, which hears cases between individuals and non-state parties. The vast majority of cases are tried in the latter. The Supreme Court hears appeals from both benches. All but one president have previously worked within the judiciary, and thus in all three branches of government.

Although a majority of the population are Kanisuat, politics is dominated by the fully-indigenous Mavean community. Political scientists and observers have characterised the Mavean government as a de facto ethnocratic democracy due to this dominance. As of 2024, no Kanisuat Mavean has been elected to the presidency, whilst only one has been elected speaker of Congress. Political scientist Miguel Sanchez argues that the indigenous minority, which is largely Protestant, has politicised the Kanisuat majority's Catholicism as indicative of a 'colonialist, alien mindset.' He adds that the Catholic Church's history as a supporter of Atitlanese colonialism and its historic penalisation of Protestantism plays a large part in this division. Because of this situation, Mava has been described as an anocracy. Various policies, including a disproportionate number of seats allocated to the outer islands, has ensured the continued political dominance of the indigenous minority.

Military

Soldiers of the Ground Force during a training exercise in Atitlan.

Responsibility for military defence is with the Sustainable Republic of Mava Defence Forces (Mavean: Tuliganitaat Saapijut ngat Mava Repalik Aituniajiin; Almagrian: Fuerzas de Defensa de la República Sostenible de Mava), which is responsible for defending the islands’ territorial integrity, including its waters and airspace. The corps is made up of two branches: the Land Defence Force and the Sea Defence Force. There is also an Air Defence Squadron that operates as an autonomous branch of the Land Defence Force. Each branch is governed by a military staff which, along with the Air Defence Squadron Command, forms the Defence Forces General Staff.

Overall command of the Defence Forces is formally vested in the President as Commander-in-Chief, who delegates his authority to the Secretary of the Department of Defence and National Security. The constitution requires that the Defence Forces be under civilian control. Neither the president nor an executive secretary cannot be a serving member of any organisation under the authority of the ministry.

In times of peace, the defence forces provides support to the Mava Constabulary Force and other government departments and agencies as required. This includes fighting against illicit drug trafficking, illegal immigration, and illegal fishing operations; operating search and rescue services; maintaining public order; protecting VIPs; and also providing a ceremonial guard on state occasions.

Administrative divisions

On independence in 1970, each of the main five islands was granted provincial status, further divided into fourteen districts. Since the adoption of a new constitution in 1997, Mava Province was abolished and replaced with two new provinces: Taalan and Kuiti, each further divided into two districts. Each province has its own appointed governor and directly-elected council, responsible for the management of local land and the provision of public services.

Administrative divisions of Mava.png

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
197220,033—    
197721,961+1.85%
198223,133+1.05%
198724,859+1.45%
199225,888+0.81%
199726,917+0.78%
200229,532+1.87%
200731,260+1.14%
201234,253+1.85%
201735,902+0.94%
202237,302+0.77%

The total population of Mava was 37,302 in the 2022 census. Of this total, around 29,000 live on the island of Mava and the remaining number on a number of smaller islands. The natural population increase is about 1,400 people a year on average.

Over half of all residents are officially of mixed heritage, the vast majority being mixed indigenous-Atitlanese, known as Kanisuat. Persons formally registered as "whole indigenous" (formerly known as "unadulterated native") account for over a third of the population and are the second largest ethnic group. Around 10 percent of the population, the majority of whom are first or second generation Maveans, belong to other ethnic groups and are concentrated in and around the capital.

Ethnic groups

The majority of Mava's population are mixed race (52.1 percent), most of these being mixed Mavean-Atitlanese (approximately 95 percent of the total mixed population). The degree to which this mixed ethnic group identifies as Mavean or as another ethnicity is difficult to determine, due to the indigenous community labelling the whole group as kanisuat (lit. part pure). The next largest group are indigenous Maveans (35.8 percent). According to law, an individual is indigenous Mavean if at least five of their eight grandparents were indigenous. Indigenous Maveans predominate in the outer islands, whilst the kanisuat mostly live on Mava Island, particularly in Taalan.

Other ethnic groups include Atitlanese (5.2 percent), Ibarmentudiak (1.7 percent), Daojingese (0.9 percent), Gavirian (0.7 percent), Anglian (0.5 percent), Morioran (0.2 percent), and small numbers of other groups (0.2 percent).

Languages

Primary languages in Mava
Languages percent
Mavean
63.2%
Almagrian
32.5%
Anglish
2.4%
Kiurut Creole
0.9%
Daojingese
0.4%
Ibarmetudiak
0.3%
Other
0.3%

Mavean and Almagrian are the co-official languages of Mava. Mavean, which is also designated the country's national language, is spoken by about 80.1 percent of the population, although only around 63.2 percent speak it as their primary language. Almagrian, introduced to the islands by Atitlan and spoken there since the 16th century, is widely understood but is fluently spoken by only around 32.5 percent of the population as a first language.

Other languages spoken in Mava include Anglish (2.4 percent), Kiurut Creole (0.9 percent), and a number of other immigrant languages. Almagrian and Anglish are the most commonly taught foreign languages in schools.

Religion

According to the 2022 census, most Maveans are Christians: 87.3 percent recorded Christianity as their faith. Catholics are by far the largest religious group, with 58.1 percent of Mavean Christians belonging to the Roman Catholic Church, the remainder belonging to Protestant (39.4 percent) and other churches (2.5 percent). Catholics are pastorally served by the Diocese of Taalan.

Taalan is the capital and largest city in Mava, with a population of around 12,000 people (over 40 percent of the country's population).

The next largest religious group belong to a selection of folk religious organisations, although many of these groups are nominally Catholic in many of their practises. 5.1 percent of the population declared no religion, the largest proportion since records began.

Other religions in the islands include Buddhism (2.1 percent) and Islam (1.3 percent). There is no state religion and the constitution guarantees protections for all faith groups.

Although Catholicism is the single largest religious group, Protestants have dominated Mavean politics since independence. This is largely attributable to the political dominance of the largely-Protestant fully indigenous Mavean population, many of whom reject Catholicism as colonial.

Education

Primary and secondary education is free and compulsory in Mava, with children required to attend school from the age of five to sixteen. Until recently, the majority of schools were private, most commonly mission schools run by Atitlanese Catholic missionaries. In 2000, almost 70 percent of primary schools and around 50 percent of secondary schools were mission schools. Since the beginning of the 2010s, these schools have been incorporated into the state-run school system, although most have retained their religious character and administration.

There are only two tertiary education institutions in Mava. The University of the Republic (Mavean: Repalik ngat Siattarlijuat), formerly the Royal Institute of Higher Education, is the sole university in the country. The National Institute for Science, Engineering, and Technology was established by state charter in 2004 to provide specialised education in STEM subjects. A large number of students travel overseas for university education, especially those seeking medical training.

Economy

The nominal GDP per capital in 2023 was $5,907, with a total GDP of $220.342 million, making Mava among the poorest countries in the world. However, adjusted to take into account purchasing power, per capita wealth was $11,203, with most wealth concentrated on the main island of Mava. The majority of islanders (82 percent) are in the labour force, most of whom were in formal employment. Home production and subsistence work constitutes a large part of the workforce, with between 5 and 20 percent of the population recorded as employed in this sector, depending on the data compiled.

A market in Taalan. Markets remain the most common place to purchase food, clothes, and other necessities.

Mava has an above-average percentage of the population in work. This is partly due to many working in the home and in semi-informal employment, but also because of a culture that emphasises work ethic and contribution to the wider community. Consequently, large numbers of older people continue in work after they become eligible for retirement.

Transport

Public buses are free of charge for students, the disabled, and senior citizens, a policy introduced in 2018. There is currently one express railway that links Taalan with a number of other smaller towns and villages; there was previously another privately-owned railway, but this has since been decommissioned after the managing company fell into bankruptcy.

The harbour of Taalan handles a large part of the islands' international trade, and also serves as a cruise terminal. The habour and the nearby Taalan International Airport handles tens of thousands of inbound journeys every year and are policed by a specialist police force.

Travel between islands is only possible by boat. A boat service managed by the Ministry of Transport provides regular trips between a number of islands, with private companies providing services where the ministry does not. Since 1992, there have been repeated attempts to build a second airport outside of Mava Island, although finance and political infighting have repeatedly held back the proposal.

Agriculture

Agriculture in Mava continues to be an important part of the islands' economy, even though recent efforts to diversify the economy and the importing of new foods and supplies have seen domestic agricultural production decline as a share of GDP. Agricultural land covers approximately 20 percent of Mava's land and employs around 9 percent of the population. In 2023, agriculture generated around 7 percent of GDP - a decline from 16 percent in 1993 - but continues to be the islands' main export.

There are around 30 independent farms in Mava, of which 10 are professional. Most are less than 2 hectare in size, with the vast majority being run by individual farmers, mostly between the ages of 40 and 59 years old.

Tourism

Mavean landscapes are an important draw for many tourists.

Mava has a modest but growing tourism industry. The Ministry of Culture and Tourism reported 37,382 annual visitors from 2011-2018. In 2019, a 1,000 unit resort was constructed in a partnership between Mava and Atitlan, with the government aiming to increase the number of annual visitors to 50,000 by 2050 (known as the '50-50 Goal'). The development of tourism has become an important part of the islands' economy, and has fuelled further economic growth through direct and indirect employment and income generation for related industries.

The Mavean government has introduced several policies to encourage tourism. Visitors to Mava do not require a visa pre-arrival, provided that they have a valid passport, proof of return travel, and enough money to be self-sufficient whilst in the country. The Taalan International Airport, which was modernised in 2011-12, welcomes the vast majority of visitors. Plans for a second airport for local travel are currently being debated in Congress.

Currency

The Mavean pauna (ISO 4217 code: MVP) was introduced in 1975, replacing the Atitlanese peso at par. The peso continued as an official currency until 1983. Although the peso is not an officially circulating currency in the islands, the Mavean economy's integration with that of Atitlan and the pauna being pegged at par with the peso means that Atitlanese coins and banknotes remain generally accepted throughout the islands.

The pauna does not have an official symbol. In official documents, the symbol "P." is used. Other versions include "MVP" and "MP" in contexts where there is need to distinguish from other currencies. The pauna is divided into 100 nenutait (singular: nenut), although nenut coins are not commonly used. The Republic of Mava Currency Board issues coins and banknotes. Commemorative coins, which are not intended for circulation, are also issued for collectors.

Culture

Mavean culture has long been influenced by its neighbours as well as colonial, mercantile, and missionary settlers.

Historians divide Mava's cultural development into three distinct periods: pre-colonial, colonial, and modern. Prior to Atitlanese colonisation, Maveans practised a variety of different cultures on each of the islands of the archipelago, each being regional variants of a broader norm that were influenced by migration between the islands. The Atitlanese brought with them their own culture and traditions, as well as Protestant missionaries from their own respective nations. For much of the colonial period, the colonial government sought to suppress and replace indigenous culture with its own Catholic-dominated practices, often vying for influence with Protestant missions. The most prominent aspects of this cultural colonialism include the foundation of a number of churches and cathedrals on all the main islands, replacing native names with Atitlanese and Almagrian names, and the installation of a local elite socialised into Atitlanese culture and identity.

Beginning in the 1920s, the suppression of local identities slowly began to turn into accommodation. However, this was reversed during the Sarimiento regime. On independence, the indigenous minority ended the preeminance of the Kanisaut elite and promoted the "Maveanisation" of the islands - including policies that encouraged the adoption of indigenous names; the renaming of buildings, towns, and roads; and the suppression of the Kanisaut political voice.

However, the political divide between the indigenous and Kanisaut communities and the resultant self-segregation between many in the two communities has not prevented cultural mixing. Both groups continue to share their cultures and fuse practices from the other group with their own, with a new "fused" generation promoting more amiable relations between the two communities.

Health

A Mavean dentist working at a pop-up surgery, 2009.

The under-five mortality rate in 2018 was 29.4 per 1000, whilst the infant mortality rate generally was 20.3 per 1000. Since 2000, successive governments have introduced efforts to expand vaccination to all children. Between 2000 and 2020, the proportion of infants who were not vaccinated declined from around half to one in five, although the expansion of vaccination programs into outlying islands continues to face difficulties. Nutrition programs and education, partly funded and sponsored by international aid, has improved understanding of a balanced diet and limited the widespread consumption of sugar and other unhealthy foods.

Extreme poverty continues to be a problem, particularly for rural communities whose lifestyles are based on a subsistence existence. Since 1979, there has been a universal healthcare system that has worked to expand access to healthcare among the poorest.

Women's rights

Women continue to face difficulties in society not experienced by men. Mavean culture historically placed much emphasis on a positive and active role for women in society, but Atitlanese colonial policies, supported by the Catholic Church, imposed severe limitations on women. Today, Mavean society continues to struggle with high rates of femicide and gender-based violence, despite successive laws enacted to increase the severity of such crimes.

Beginning in the 2000s, women have achieved greater influence in politics. As of 2022, 29 percent of seats in Congress are held by women, with proposals for a quota for elected female representatives receiving support from many in congress.

Sports

Football is the most popular sport in Mava. The national team is the Mava national football team. Other popular sports include basketball and rugby.

See also

Notes

  1. The President's Office and a number of government departments are located in Kuatni, although Taalan remains the official capital.