Provinces of the Dominican Republic explained

The Dominican Republic is divided into thirty-one Spanish; Castilian: provincias (provinces; singular Spanish; Castilian: provincia), while the national capital, Santo Domingo, is contained within its own Distrito Nacional ("National District"; "D.N." on the map below).

The division of the country into provinces is laid down in the constitution (Title I, Section II, Article 5)[1] and enacted by law. The latter is currently Law 5220 on the Territorial Division of the Dominican Republic (Spanish; Castilian: Ley No. 5220 sobre División Territorial de la República Dominicana), issued 1959 and frequently amended to create new provinces and lower-level administrative units.

The provinces as administrative divisions

The provinces are the first-level administrative subdivisions of the country. The headquarters of the central government's regional offices are normally found in the capital cities of provinces. The president appoints an administrative governor (Spanish; Castilian: Gobernador Civil) for each province but not for the Distrito Nacional (Title IX of the constitution).[1]

The provinces are divided into municipalities (Spanish; Castilian: [[municipio]]s), which are the second–level political and administrative subdivisions of the country.[1]

The Distrito Nacional was created in 1936. Prior to this, the Distrito Nacional was the old Santo Domingo Province, in existence since the country's independence in 1844. It is not to be confused with the new Santo Domingo Province, which split off from it in 2001. While it is similar to a province in many ways, the Distrito Nacional differs in its lack of an administrative governor and consisting only of one municipality, Santo Domingo, the city council (Spanish; Castilian: [[ayuntamiento]]) and mayor (Spanish; Castilian: [[síndico]]) which are in charge of its administration.[2]

The provinces as constituencies

The provinces are also constituencies for the elections to the bicameral National Congress (Spanish; Castilian: Congreso de la República). Each province elects one member of the Senate (Spanish; Castilian: Senado) and a guaranteed minimum of two members of the Chamber of Deputies (Spanish; Castilian: Cámara de Diputados).[1] [3]

Statistics

The following is a table of the provinces and their capital cities. The population figures are from the 2021 population estimate.[4]

Coat Of ArmsProvince
National District
CapitalRegionDepartmentArea(km2)[5] Population2021[6] DensityMapEstablishment year
AzuaSouthValdesia2,531.77 222,610 86.59 1844
BaorucoSouthEnriquillo1,282.23 101,306 77.40 1943
BarahonaSouthEnriquillo1,739.38 189,100 108.49 1881
DajabónCibaoCibao Noroeste1,020.73 66,675 63.95 1938
DuarteCibaoCibao Nordeste1,605.35 299,583 183.70 1896
El SeiboEastYuma1,786.80 94,049 63.58 1844
Elías PiñaSouthEl Valle1,426.20 63,303 35.51 1942
EspaillatCibaoCibao Norte838.62 240,428 281.97 1885
Hato MayorEastHiguamo1,329.29 85,747 64.37 1984
Hermanas MirabalCibaoCibao Nordeste440.43 92,045 209.78 1952
IndependenciaSouthEnriquillo2,006.44 58,951 27.73 1948
La AltagraciaEastYuma3,010.34 360,874 104.61 1944
La RomanaEastYuma653.95 274,894 397.59 1944
La VegaCibaoCibao Sur2,287.24 412,469 176.64 1844
María Trinidad SánchezCibaoCibao Nordeste1,271.71 140,954 111.17 1959
Monseñor NouelCibaoCibao Sur992.39 174,959 171.51 1991
Monte CristiCibaoCibao Noroeste1,924.35 117,736 59.22 1879
Monte PlataEastHiguamo2,632.14 191,447 71.68 1991
PedernalesSouthEnriquillo2,074.53 35,280 16.12 1957
PeraviaSouthValdesia792.33 198,499 241.62 1944
Puerto PlataCibaoCibao Norte1,852.90 333,940 177.29 1850
SamanáCibaoCibao Nordeste853.74 113,036 125.62 1867
San CristóbalSouthValdesia1,265.77 643,595 505.93 1932
San José de OcoaSouthValdesia855.4 53,833 45.11 2000
San JuanSouthEl Valle3,569.39 220,264 266.12 1938
San Pedro de MacorísEastHiguamo1,255.46 306,002 83.66 1907
Sánchez RamírezCibaoCibao Sur1,196.13 151,888 121.09 1952
SantiagoCibaoCibao Norte2,836.511,052,088 355.30 1844
Santiago RodríguezCibaoCibao Noroeste1,111.14 57,209 51.71 1948
Santo DomingoSouthOzama1,301.84 2,955,339 2036.08 2001
ValverdeCibaoCibao Noroeste823.38 177,865 207.06 1959
Distrito NacionalEastOzama104.44 1,049,567 9,651.45 1932

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CONSTITUCION DE LA REPUBLICA DOMINICANA. Asamblea Nacional. es. 2007-03-11.
  2. Web site: Ley No. 163-01 que crea la provincia de Santo Domingo, y modifica los Artículos 1 y 2 de la Ley No. 5220, sobre División Territorial de la República Dominicana.. EL CONGRESO NACIONAL. es. 2007-03-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070518042944/http://www.informejudicial.com/leyes/Division+Territorial/Ley+163-01,+crea+Provincia+Santo+Domingo+y+Modifica+Articulos+1+y+2+Ley+5220.htm . 2007-05-18.
  3. Web site: Ley Electoral, No. 275-97. EL CONGRESO NACIONAL. es. 2007-03-11.
  4. Web site: Estamaciones y Proyecciones de la Población Dominicana por Regiones, Provincias, Municipios y Distritos Municipales, 2021. PDF. Consejo Nacional de Población y Familia. es. 2021-06-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20170102090940/http://one.gob.do/Estadisticas/8/proyecciones-de-poblacion. 2017-01-02. dead.
  5. News: Provincias Dominicanas - Portal Oficial del Estado Dominicano . 1 January 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170101162641/http://www.gob.do/index.php/e-municipios/e-localidades/2014-12-16-20-41-38 . 1 January 2017 .
  6. Oficina Nacional de Estadística . Estimaciones y proyecciones de la población total por año calendario, según región y provincia, 2000–2030 . 31 December 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170102090940/http://one.gob.do/Estadisticas/8/proyecciones-de-poblacion . 2 January 2017.