In Indonesia, district is the third-level administrative subdivision, below regency or city.[1] [2] [3] [4] The local term Indonesian: kecamatan is used in the majority of Indonesian areas. The term Indonesian: distrik is used in provinces in Papua. In the Special Region of Yogyakarta, the term kapanewon is used for districts within the regencies, while the term Indonesian: kemantren is used for districts within Yogyakarta, the province's only city.[5] According to Statistics Indonesia, there are a total of 7,288 districts in Indonesia as of 2023, subdivided into 83,971 administrative villages (rural Indonesian: desa and urban Indonesian: kelurahan).
During the Dutch East Indies and early republic period, the term district referred to kewedanan, a subdivision of regency, while Indonesian: kecamatan was translated as subdistrict (Dutch; Flemish: onderdistrict).[6] Following the abolition of kewedanan, the term district began to be associated with Indonesian: kecamatan which has since been directly administered by regency. Mainstream media such as The Jakarta Post,[7] [8] [9] Indonesian: [[Kompas]],[10] [11] [12] and Tempo[13] [14] [15] [16] use "district" to refer to Indonesian: kecamatan; however machine translation services like Google Translate often incorrectly uses "district" to refer to regencies instead.
District in Indonesia is the third-level administrative subdivision, below regency or city (second-level) and province (first-level). According to the Act Number 23 of 2014, district is formed by the government of regency or city in order to improve the coordination of governance, public services, and empowerment of urban/rural villages.[17] District head is a career bureaucrat position directly appointed by regent or mayor. The local district term Indonesian: kecamatan is used in the majority of Indonesian areas, with Indonesian: camat being the head.
During the Dutch East Indies and early republic period, the term district referred to kewedanan, a subdivision of a regency. Kewedanan itself was divided into Indonesian: kecamatan, which was translated as subdistrict (Dutch; Flemish: onderdistrict).[6] Following the abolition of kewedanan, the term district began to be associated with Indonesian: kecamatan which has since been directly administered by regency. In English-language dictionary, subdistrict means "a division or subdivision of a district", hence the translation of Indonesian: kecamatan as subdistrict is no longer precise since the absence of kewedanan as district.[18] [19] The 1982 publication of Statistics Indonesia translated Indonesian: kecamatan as district.[20]
With the release of the Act Number 21 of 2001 on the Special Autonomous of Papua Province, the term Indonesian: distrik was used instead of Indonesian: kecamatan in the entire Western New Guinea.[21] The difference between the two is merely the naming, with kepala distrik being the district head. It was later followed in 2019 by another autonomous province, the Special Region of Yogyakarta, where Indonesian: kecamatan was replaced with kapanewon and Indonesian: kemantren. Sultan Hamengkubuwono X, the region's governor and the monarch of Yogyakarta Sultanate, issued Gubernatorial Decree Number 25 of 2019, which restored the old naming convention for the region's subdivisions. Kapanewon (a subdivision of regency) is headed by a panewu, while Indonesian: kemantren (a subdivision of city), is headed by a mantri pamong praja.[5]