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Provinces of Argentina
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Provinces of Argentina

Argentina and its provinces, including its claim to the Falkland Islands (<!-- lang-es -->).
Argentina and its provinces, including its claim to the Falkland Islands ().

Argentina is subdivided into twenty-three provinces (, singular provincia) and one federal district (Capital de la República or Capital de la Nación, informally the Capital Federal). The federal district and the provinces have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.

Provinces are then divided into departments (, singular departamento), except for Buenos Aires Province, which is divided into partidos.

Contents


Regions

The country is also divided into six or seven regions (seven when The Pampas is divided into the Pampas' plains and Pampas' sierras):

Region Provinces included
Argentine Northwest Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca, La Rioja
Gran Chaco Formosa, Chaco, Santiago del Estero
Mesopotamia Misiones, Entre Ríos, Corrientes
Cuyo San Juan, Mendoza, San Luis
The Pampas Córdoba, Santa Fe, La Pampa, Buenos Aires
Patagonia Rio Negro, Neuquén, Chubut, Santa Cruz, Tierra del Fuego

Even though there are provinces that belong to more than one region, they are shown here within the most representative region. In the Tucumán province, the smallest of Argentina, coexist three regions: the Pampas to the south, Gran Chaco to the northeast, and Argentine Northwest.

Provinces

  1. Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
  2. Provincia de Buenos Aires
  3. Provincia de Catamarca
  4. Provincia del Chaco
  5. Provincia del Chubut
  6. Provincia de Córdoba
  7. Provincia de Corrientes
  8. Provincia de Entre Ríos
  9. Provincia de Formosa
  10. Provincia de Jujuy
  11. Provincia de La Pampa
  12. Provincia de La Rioja
  13. Provincia de Mendoza
  14. Provincia de Misiones
  15. Provincia del Neuquén
  16. Provincia de Río Negro
  17. Provincia de Salta
  18. Provincia de San Juan
  19. Provincia de San Luis
  20. Provincia de Santa Cruz
  21. Provincia de Santa Fe
  22. Provincia de Santiago del Estero
  23. Provincia de Tierra del Fuego,
    Antártida e Islas del Atlántico Sur
  24. Provincia de Tucumán
Administrative divisions of Argentina.
Administrative divisions of Argentina.

Demographics

Province/District Capital Population (2001) Rank Area (km²) Rank Density (/km²) Rank
Buenos Aires 4 203 24 1
Buenos Aires Province La Plata 1 1 44.95 3
Catamarca Province San Fernando del V. 20 11 3.26 19
Chaco Province Resistencia 9 12 9.90 11
Chubut Province Rawson 18 3 1.84 23
Córdoba Province Córdoba 2 5 18.60 6
Corrientes Province Corrientes 11 16 10.60 10
Entre Ríos Province Paraná 7 17 14.70 7
Formosa Province Formosa 16 19 6.75 14
Jujuy Province San Salvador de Jujuy 14 20 11.50 8
La Pampa Province Santa Rosa 21 8 2.00 22
La Rioja Province La Rioja 22 14 3.23 20
Mendoza Province Mendoza 5 7 10.61 9
Misiones Province Posadas 10 21 32.40 4
Neuquén Province Neuquén 17 13 5.00 16
Río Negro Province Viedma 15 4 2.72 21
Salta Province Salta 8 6 6.94 12
San Juan Province San Juan 13 15 6.92 13
San Luis Province San Luis 19 18 4.80 17
Santa Cruz Province Río Gallegos 23 2 0.81 24
Santa Fe Province Santa Fe 3 10 22.56 5
Santiago del Estero Province Santiago del Estero 12 9 5.90 15
Tierra del Fuego Province Ushuaia 24 23 4.75 18
Tucumán Province San Miguel de Tucumán 6 22 59.42 2

Politics

See also List of Governors in Argentina The internal products of the provinces are merged into the national product, and then the national budget is decided, including what percentage of it is given to each province. Provinces are free to choose their own utilization of the assigned percentage of the national product. Each province has also its own government, with a governor, a senate and a deputy chamber. It is not uncommon though, for the national government to intervene in a province under internal instability or after a corruption scandal, designating an intervenor to replace the local government until the situation is normalized. Many provinces have had, or still have, governments controlled by a single family. This is the case of the Rodríguez Saá in San Luis Province,http://www.almargen.com.ar/sitio/seccion/historia/sanluis/ the Saadi family in Catamarca Province, and many others, often involved in corruption or criminal scandals that are never solved, such as the murder of María Soledad Morales in Catamarca while Ramón Saadi was its governor.http://www.clarin.com/diario/especiales/soledad/index.html

History

The north of Argentina was the first part of the present country to be explored by the Spanish colonisation, searching for the routes that would allow them to bring the gold and silver extracted in the Viceroyalty of Peru to the port of Buenos Aires.

Santiago del Estero, in the year 1550, was the first city founded in the territory with such ends, but lost its importance when Tucumán and Salta replaced it as mid-stops to the Atlantic coast when these two cities secured from the aboriginal attacks, and economically strengthened.

The centre of the country was also soon explored and inhabited, being the most important of the first founded cities the city of Córdoba, that became not only a political but also cultural centre with the creation of the first university, the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba in 1622.

Most capital cities of the centre-northern Argentina were founded before the year 1600, except for Santa Rosa in La Pampa Province, and Resistencia in Chaco Province.

To the south of the Colorado River, the Patagonia remained under control of the aboriginals. The river itself served as natural frontier.

It was not until the infamous Roca's Conquest of the Desert, started in 1879, when the southern part of Argentina was conquered in what meant the near annihilation of the aboriginal people living in these lands.

The current political division of the provinces of Patagonia was set in 1884 and has not been changed since then, except between 1944 and 1955 when a stripe covering the southern part of Chubut Province and the northern part of Santa Cruz Province was named Comodoro Rivadavia Military Zone.

But the National Territories didn't have provincial status until the 20th century. They were named provinces in 1957. The exception is Tierra del Fuego Province, which was named in 1990.

Due to the late conquest of the south of the country and the prevailing cold weather, most people live in the central or northern provinces. Recent immigration to the south, mainly from Buenos Aires Province and Buenos Aires city, is lessening this difference.

See also

External links

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