Administrative divisions of Menghe: Difference between revisions

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Under the Kang and Sŭng dynasties, which followed the Jin incursion, Menghean administrators developed a standardized three-tier system to accommodate the growth of the administrative bureaucracy. Prefectures (州, ''ju'') were grouped into circuits (道, ''do''), and further subdivided into counties (県, ''hyŏn''). Cities which were provincial or prefectural capitals were designated ''bu'' (府), indicating a seat of government.
Under the Kang and Sŭng dynasties, which followed the Jin incursion, Menghean administrators developed a standardized three-tier system to accommodate the growth of the administrative bureaucracy. Prefectures (州, ''ju'') were grouped into circuits (道, ''do''), and further subdivided into counties (県, ''hyŏn''). Cities which were provincial or prefectural capitals were designated ''bu'' (府), indicating a seat of government.


The broad system of administrative divisions as it exists today was established under the [[Yi dynasty]]. At the highest level, the country was divided into Provinces (道, ''do''), which were further divided into rural prefectures (県, ''hyŏn'') and urban prefectures (府, ''bu''). Both of these were subdivided into cities (市, ''si'') and counties (郡, ''gun''). As the Yi emperors expanded their control into the Central Hemithean Steppe, they created new provinces, which were divided into leagues (盟, ''maeng'') and below that, banners (旗, ''gi''), to govern the nomadic peoples there. This system was carried forward without changes into the Myŏn dynasty (1528-1866), and persisted into the Three States Period.
The broad system of administrative divisions as it exists today was established under the [[Yi dynasty]]. At the highest level, the country was divided into Provinces (道, ''do''), which were further divided into rural prefectures (県, ''hyŏn'') and urban prefectures (府, ''bu''). Both of these were subdivided into cities (市, ''si'') and counties (郡, ''gun''). As the Yi emperors expanded their control into the Central Hemithean Steppe, they created new provinces, which were divided into leagues (盟, ''maeng'') and below that, banners (旗, ''gi''), to govern the nomadic peoples there. This system was carried forward without changes into the Myŏn dynasty (1528-1866), and persisted into the Three States Period in Sinyi and Namyang.
 
The leaders of the Federative Republic of Menghe aimed to modernize and update Menghe's administrative system, starting with the hierarchy of administrative divisions. They abolished the old system of provinces and divided the country into five Federal Regions (聯邦區 / 연방구, ''yŏnbanggu'') - Chŏllo, Donghae, Menggang, Dongbuk, and Sansŏ - and later added a sixth, Sŏnam, representing the recently annexed southwest. Federal regions were divided directly into prefectures, municipalities, and leagues, identical to the Yi-Myŏn nomenclature but skipping the old provincial level, and these were subdivided into cities (市, ''si'') and counties (郡, ''gun''). In an effort to further deepen the government's reach, a new level, the ''myŏn'' (面) was added beneath the city and county. In rural areas this corresponded to a township containing multiple towns, villages, and hamlets, while in urban areas it corresponded to a neighborhood or district. Owing to limited budgets and state capacity, staffing of myŏn-level offices remained minimal, particularly in poor interior areas.
 
After his military coup in 1928, General [[Kwon Chong-hoon]] switched from a federal system to a unitary one, reorganizing the Federal Regions into a set of twenty-five provinces similar in scope to the current ones.


==First-Level Divisions==
==First-Level Divisions==

Revision as of 23:07, 30 October 2019

File:Provinces of Menghe.png
The 25 Second-Level Divisions of Menghe, marked with their administrative numbers. The key can be found in the "Provinces" section below.


The Socialist Republic of Menghe is formally divided into five levels of administration, with greatly varying degrees of power over policy. Conventionally, these are known as the Regional, Provincial, Prefectural, County, and Village levels, though in formal terminology the terms "First-level division," "Second-level division," and so on are preferred, as there are multiple types of unit at each level. Because Menghe is a unitary state, local governments have relatively limited authority to write their own laws and manage their own bureaucracies, but the central government may give them considerable leeway over the implementation of broad policy initiatives.

The overall hierarchy of administrative divisions as it currently exists dates back to the Yi dynasty, though it has undergone some adaptation since then. Many provincial, prefectural, and county borders date to this era, at least in their approximate range and scope, and many areas are associated with specific local cultures and regional identities. Major changes included the formation of six Semi-Autonomous Provinces after the Menghean War of Liberation, the conversion of Villages and Towns to Communes under the DPRM (and their later reversion), and the creation and expansion of municipalities from 1990 onward.

History

For most of ancient history, Menghe was divided into warring states (國, guk), which used a variety of schemes for subdividing their realms. The most common division names in the historical record are ju (州), generally translated "province" or "prefecture," and gun (郡), originally indicating a commandery awarded to a duke or general. The State of Yang, which unified much of the Meng River Basin in the 3rd century BCE, was divided into a large number of ju and gun, with no administration below that level.

After defeating the State of Yang, administrators in the Meng dynasty streamlined the national system of administration. The country's initial territory was divided into nine ju (州), much larger than the original Yang ones and similar in function to small provinces. These, in turn, were divided into hyŏn (県), translated as counties or prefectures. Ju on the frontiers were later divided into gun (郡), particularly in new areas captured by Meng troops, and were run by military officials.

After Menghe's fragmentation into the Five States and Seven Fiefdoms, five of the Meng dynasty's largest Ju formed the basis for the largest warring states, known as ung (雄), while the smaller kingdoms (國, guk) at their fringes grew out of fragmented ju or large hyŏn. As in the earlier warring states period, lower administration again diverged between different polities over time, with frontier counties converted to gun (郡) as territory changed hands. The Jin dynasty, which emerged from the victorious state of Chikai, imposed a standard ju - gun hierarchy over the Meng majority areas of the country, with a separate scheme of leagues (盟, maeng) and banners (旗, gi) in nomadic areas.

Under the Kang and Sŭng dynasties, which followed the Jin incursion, Menghean administrators developed a standardized three-tier system to accommodate the growth of the administrative bureaucracy. Prefectures (州, ju) were grouped into circuits (道, do), and further subdivided into counties (県, hyŏn). Cities which were provincial or prefectural capitals were designated bu (府), indicating a seat of government.

The broad system of administrative divisions as it exists today was established under the Yi dynasty. At the highest level, the country was divided into Provinces (道, do), which were further divided into rural prefectures (県, hyŏn) and urban prefectures (府, bu). Both of these were subdivided into cities (市, si) and counties (郡, gun). As the Yi emperors expanded their control into the Central Hemithean Steppe, they created new provinces, which were divided into leagues (盟, maeng) and below that, banners (旗, gi), to govern the nomadic peoples there. This system was carried forward without changes into the Myŏn dynasty (1528-1866), and persisted into the Three States Period in Sinyi and Namyang.

The leaders of the Federative Republic of Menghe aimed to modernize and update Menghe's administrative system, starting with the hierarchy of administrative divisions. They abolished the old system of provinces and divided the country into five Federal Regions (聯邦區 / 연방구, yŏnbanggu) - Chŏllo, Donghae, Menggang, Dongbuk, and Sansŏ - and later added a sixth, Sŏnam, representing the recently annexed southwest. Federal regions were divided directly into prefectures, municipalities, and leagues, identical to the Yi-Myŏn nomenclature but skipping the old provincial level, and these were subdivided into cities (市, si) and counties (郡, gun). In an effort to further deepen the government's reach, a new level, the myŏn (面) was added beneath the city and county. In rural areas this corresponded to a township containing multiple towns, villages, and hamlets, while in urban areas it corresponded to a neighborhood or district. Owing to limited budgets and state capacity, staffing of myŏn-level offices remained minimal, particularly in poor interior areas.

After his military coup in 1928, General Kwon Chong-hoon switched from a federal system to a unitary one, reorganizing the Federal Regions into a set of twenty-five provinces similar in scope to the current ones.

First-Level Divisions

At the highest level, Menghe is divided into eight regions (區 / 구, Gu), formally known as greater administrative regions (大行政區 / 대행정구, Daehaengjŏnggu). These are groupings of two to five provinces, built around shared geography and economic composition.


Second-Level Divisions

There are twenty-five Second-Level Divisions in Menghe, consisting of three Directly Controlled Cities, eighteen Provinces, and four Semi-Autonomous Provinces. The boundaries of these units generally follow the edges of historical subdivisions of Menghe, and some – such as Taehwa, Donghae, and Chŏnro – still bear the names of past warring states that occupied those approximate areas. Even so, Provincial boundaries are not permanent, and the Central Government has partitioned off four new provinces since 1972 (Baeksan, Sunju, the North/South division of Donghae, and the East/West division of Chŏnro).

Directly Controlled City

There are three Directly Controlled Cities (직할시 / 直轄市, Jikhalsi) in Menghe: Donggyŏng, Sunju, and Junggyŏng. These are equal in rank to Provinces, but skip the Prefectural level of organization, and are instead divided directly into Districts and the surrounding Counties. By default, the three Directly Controlled Cities function as though they are Provinces consisting of a single Metropolitan City.

Status as a Directly Controlled City is not a function of population; Haeju and Hwasŏng both have larger populations than Junggyŏng but remain Major Cities within provinces. Donggyŏng and Junggyŏng were established as separate subdivisions in 1899 to reflect their status as current and historical capitals, and Sunju was broken off of Chŏnro in 1991 to help it formulate its own policies as a Special Economic Zone.

Province

Provinces (도 / 道, Do, occasionally translated as "Circuit") are the most numerous subdivisions in the country. Technically, Semi-Autonomous Provinces are a subcategory of Provinces, and have the same formal leadership structure. Provinces are divided into Prefectures and Metropolitan Cities.

Semi-Autonomous Province

Four provinces of Menghe carry the status of Semi-Autonomous Province (준자치도 / 準自治道, Jun-Jachido): Argentszant, Darisant, Turkesant, and Siyadag. All are located in the southwest of the country, which is sometimes informally referred to as the "Southwestern Semi-Autonomous Region" or "Uzeri Semi-Autonomous Region," though these classifications do not receive formal government recognition. Semi-autonomous provinces are divided and administered in the same way as standard Provinces, but receive greater federal rights to implement their own cultural policies and may conduct local administration in minority languages. In this vein, while they follow the same subdivision system described below, the names of smaller units may be repeated in the local language.

List of Second-Level Divisions

Code (2009) Name Sinmun Gomun Area (km2) Population (2015) Population Density (per km2) Capital
1 Donggyŏng Directly Controlled City 동경직할시 東京直轄市 1,864.90 17,286,133 9,269.20 Donggyŏng
2 Sunju Directly Controlled City 순주직할시 淳州直轄市 3,395.57 22,623,714 6,662.71 Sunju
3 Junggyŏng Directly Controlled City 중경직할시 中京直轄市 1,641.82 6,249,895 3,806.70 Junggyŏng
4 Chŏnghae Province 청해도 青海道 104,740.40 32,225,452 307.67 Chŏngdo
5 Goyang Province 고양도 高陽道 157,950.16 24,014,298 152.04 Jang'an
6 North Donghae Province 동해북도 東海北道 70,486.15 34,157,114 484.59 Anchŏn
7 South Donghae Province 동해남도 東海南道 62,836.78 45,188,285 719.14 Hyangchun
8 Ryonggyŏng Province 룡경도 龍境道 171,122.00 43,706,259 255.41 Daegok
9 Sinbukgang Province 신북강도 新北江道 32,649.75 7,174,932 219.75 Baekjin
10 Gilim Province 길림도 吉林道 171,457.83 16,097,904 93.89 Songrimsŏng
11 Taehwa Province 태화도 泰火道 153,882.94 17,679,595 114.89 Hwaju
12 Haenam Province 해남도 海南道 155,748.64 44,549,713 286.04 Hwasŏng
13 Sanchŏn Province 산천도 山川道 88,369.87 22,734,823 257.19 Chŏnjin
14 Sŏsamak Province 서사막도 西沙漠道 372,020.58 3,360,797 9.03 Suhait
15 Chikai Province 치카이도 N/A 117,986.87 9,150,286 77.55 Jinjŏng
16 Gangwŏn Province 강원도 江原道 158,062.10 13,702,801 86.69 Wŏnsan
17 East Chŏnro Province 천로동도 千鷺東道 197,726.89 38,869,260 196.58 Hamyang
18 West Chŏnro Province 천로서도 千鷺西道 252,093.38 50,927,448 202.02 Insŏng
19 Baeksan Province 백산도 白山道 105,785.19 2,196,945 20.77 Wŏnsŏ
20 Pyŏngsu Province 평수도 平肅道 74,180.23 4,450,981 60.00 Susŏng
21 Hwangjŏn Province 황전도 黄田道 88,172.98 17,851,509 202.46 Pyŏngan
22 Uzeristan Semi-Autonomous Province 우쩨리스탄준자치도 N/A 174,928.03 22,106,859 126.38 Kuşadası
23 Daristan Semi-Autonomous Province 다리스탄준자치도 N/A 156,905.37 8,692,124 55.40 Hasavyurt
24 Argentstan Semi-Autonomous Province 아르겐스탄준자치도 N/A 110,673.32 15,812,675 142.88 Szantiag
25 Siyadag Semi-Autonomous Province 시야닥준자치도 N/A 47,948.49 4,107,376 85.66 Kadirkent

Third-Level Divisions

Third-Level Divisions, also known as Prefecture-level divisions, are the next level down in Provinces and Semi-Autonomous Provinces. They are divided into three types: Prefectures (県, hyŏn), Municipalities (府, bu), and Leagues (盟, maeng).

Prefecture

Prefectures (현 / 県, hyŏn) are the default subdivision of provinces. They may include minor population centers, but are separate from major ones. Prefectures are divided into Counties and Cities, but do not include Districts.

Metropolitan City

Metropolitan Cities (도시 / 都市, Dosi, sometimes translated as “Major Cities” or “Prefecture-level Cities”) are major urban areas within a province, usually those with a population of over 1 million. They should not be confused with Directly Controlled Cities, which are otherwise identical but are independent at the provincial level. Metropolitan Cities may contain some suburbs or surrounding towns and villages, but do not extend far into rural areas, and are mainly organized to give a large city’s government further subdivisions and greater control over its own urban administration. Metropolitan Cities are mainly subdivided into Districts, but they may also include Counties on their periphery. As a rule, they do not include separate Cities as a subdivision; in cases where one City is merged with a Metropolitan City, it is generally broken up into smaller Districts.

Fourth-Level Divisions

County

Counties (군 / 郡, Gun) are the most common fourth-level division of Menghe. They are relatively rural or suburban, and generally have populations of under 200,000. The Gumun symbol originated in the First Warring States Period, and first referred to a Commandery at the periphery of a larger state. Counties are divided into a combination of Towns and Villages, and in rare cases include Gacha.

City

Cities (시 / 市, Si) also translated as “Minor Cities,” “County-Level Cities,” or “Non-Divided Cities,” are densely populated counties that consist of a minor urban area and its immediate suburbs. They should not be confused with Metropolitan Cities, which are a higher-level administrative division. Cities generally have populations of between 200,000 and one million, depending on the redesignation process. They are directly divided into Blocks (Myŏn), skipping the District level present in larger cities.

District

Districts (구 / 區, Gu) are subdivisions of a larger city. They are only present within Metropolitan Cities and Directly Controlled Cities. Menghean districts are similar to boroughs in other countries, and handle local administration of smaller areas of a city. Districts are divided into Blocks (Myŏn).

Fifth-Level Divisions

Block

Blocks (면 / 面, Myŏn), not to be confused with city blocks, are similar to formal neighborhoods or communities. Blocks may range from highly developed urban areas at the city center to less developed suburbs at the periphery. Suburban Blocks, even relatively rural ones, are tightly integrated into the District or City, whereas Towns and Villages enjoy a higher degree of autonomy. Blocks have only limited governing authority and are mostly responsible for providing local services.

Town

Towns (읍 / 邑, Ŭp) are a division of Counties and some Districts, and have greater autonomy than Blocks. Villages automatically acquire Town status when they reach a population of 20,000. Towns lack formal subdivisions, but may informally be divided into Neighborhoods (근린 / 近隣, “Gŭnrin”) in everyday speech, especially when describing different locations within a town.

Village

Villages (리 / 里, Ri or Li) are the smallest administrative division to have a separate local government. They are exclusively rural, consisting of small population centers combined with their surrounding land. Many were formed directly out of Communes dissolved by land reforms after 1987. In densely populated parts of the country, Villages may directly abut one another, while in the sparsely populated Northwest and Central Mountains a given village may be attached to a very large plot of unpopulated land.

Gacha

Gacha (가차) are a special subdivision unique to certain Counties in Sŏsamak province, and are applied to semi-nomadic communities near the border with Dzhungestan. Otherwise equivalent to Villages, their administrative duties are modified to adapt to the needs of nomadic groups, including those which regularly cross the border. As such, they tend to cover a much larger territory, and have different methods for assigning addresses and census locations.

Reclassification

Every year, the local Bureau of Demographics and Statistics in each administrative division assesses the population of each of its subdivisions, and makes recommendations about whether to modify any of them. This may include merging, dividing, reclassifying, or upgrading existing districts, or revising the boundaries between them. Local governments are not required to follow these recommendations, and may also revise boundaries for other reasons. Especially during the 1990s and 2000s, it was common for Prefecture governments to upgrade fast-growing County centers to City status in order to encourage and anticipate future growth, in some cases using this as an incentive for other towns to catch up.

Part of this flexibility stems from ambiguity in the way guidelines on upgrading are phrased. For example, central regulations on the population threshold to form a city (市) refer to the number of people in the “contiguous population center,” not in the county or any of its member towns. Thus, a city may be carved out of the corner of one county, plus elements of the neighboring counties, and its edges may be defined by existing town and village boundaries or drawn anew based on population distribution. Similar ambiguity applies when upgrading a City to a Metropolitan City (都市); demographers may include the populations of adjacent towns and villages in the total, and usually draw Metropolitan City boundaries around a larger area to leave room for further expansion and ease integration with suburbs. Even the simplest regulation, which automatically upgrades Villages to Towns when they surpass a population of 20,000, also allows County officials to merge several "adjacent and contiguous" villages into one town so that they meet the total. As a result, the reclassification of cities is often conducted on an ad-hoc basis, and may reflect the relative political influence of local administrative officials.

Regulations imposed in 2009 have sought to limit the speed of these changes, which were making it difficult to coordinate and redistribute local services. The new laws focused primarily on the merging of villages and Cities, and the formation of "shadow Cities" from non-contiguous groups of towns in a county. Notably, the regulations did not cover the "annexation" of neighboring counties by Metropolitan Cities, leaving additional room for the expansion of existing urban units.

Proposed revisions

Revised provincial map

In 2010, the NSCC debated a proposal by In Jae-sŭng, a prominent Menghean geographer, to increase the number of provinces to 44. This would be done by breaking up the largest and most populous provinces and reviving some former provincial units from the Myŏn, Ŭi, and Sŭng dynasties. Hwasŏng, Insŏng, Anchŏn, and Haeju would also be upgraded to the status of Directly Controlled City. As part of the same reform, the National Assembly would abolish the Prefecture as a unit of government through a constitutional amendment, allowing the smaller Provinces to directly administer Counties.

While the NSCC ultimately decided to retain the Province-Prefecture-County system, In Jae-sŭng's 44-province proposal would resurface again and again in the coming years, often with minor changes to the new provincial boundaries. Some smaller provinces have begun experimenting with direct administration, disbanding Prefectures to create a special category of Directly Administered Counties, but these remain the exception.

A particular source of debate around the proposal is that it would divide several provinces between their wealthier and poorer areas. In Jae-sŭng saw this as a benefit of the plan, as it would allow provincial governments to manage more economically homogeneous populations and give hinterland areas direct representation; he even proposed an accompanying system of province-to-province cash transfers, as part of a centrally coordinated effort to reduce regional inequality. Skeptics, however, contend that the plan would deny hinterland areas the benefits of provincial integration with better-developed areas. Some have also pointed out that a Province-County chain of command, while manageable in smaller coastal provinces with few counties and many cities, would be too burdensome in large rural provinces with dozens of counties.

Renaming of Argentstan

After suppressing the Innominadan Uprising, some Menghean policymakers expressed concern over the fact that with the approval of the Innominadan secession referendum, there would be an independent state of Argentstan on Menghe's southwestern border. The incoming Argentstani leadership has generally expressed strongly pro-Menghe views, as Menghe allowed the secession referendum to go forward and has worked hard to oppose violence against ethnic Argentans by Innominadan Creoles. Yet the new country, which already lays claim to a large swath of territory within the Maverican-backed People's Republic of Innominada, would share a name with a Menghean Semi-Autonomous Province containing an Argentan ethnic majority.

With little fanfare, on April 4th, 2018, the Menghean government formally changed the name of the Argentstan Semi-Autonomous Province to "Semi-Autonomous Province of Argentan People Living in Menghe" (Menghean: 멩국에서 아르겐탄 민족의 자치도, Menggugesŏ Arŭgentan Minjog-e Jachido). Signs, websites, and government letterhead will gradually be changed over the course of 2018 to use the new full name. Faced with the even wordier form, unofficial commentators began using the shorthand form "Arŭgentan Jachido," which gained additional legitimacy when repeated in state-owned media.


See also