Departments of Uruguay explained

Department
Departamento (Spanish)
Territory:Oriental Republic of Uruguay
Current Number:19 departments
Subdivision:Municipalities

Uruguay consists of 19 departments (departamentos). Each department has a legislature, called a Departmental Board, and a chief executive called a Intendente.

History

The first division of Uruguay into six departments occurred on 27 January 1816. In February of the same year, two more departments were formed, and in 1828 one more was added. When the country's first constitution was signed in 1830, there were nine departments: Montevideo, Maldonado, Canelones, San José, Colonia, Soriano, Paysandú, Durazno and Cerro Largo. At that time, the department of Paysandú occupied all the territory north of the Río Negro, which included the current departments of Artigas, Rivera, Tacuarembó, Salto, Paysandú and Río Negro.

On 17 June 1837, this northern territory was divided in three, by the creation of the departments of Salto and Tacuarembó. At the same time, the department of Minas (which was eventually renamed to Lavalleja) was created out of parts of Cerro Largo and Maldonado. In 1856 Florida was created, and on 7 July 1880 the department of Río Negro was split from Paysandú and Rocha was split from Maldonado. In 1884 Treinta y Tres was formed from parts of Cerro Largo and Minas, while Artigas was split from Salto. The same year the department of Rivera was split from Tacuarembó, and in 1885 Flores was split from San José.

List of departments

Flag or
COA
DepartmentISO 3166-2
code
FormationArea
(km2)
Population
(2011)[1]
Density
(/km2)
CapitalCapital population
ArtigasUY-AR1884
(from Salto)
11,928 73,378 6.15 Artigas40,658
CanelonesUY-CA1816
(as Villa de Guadalupe)
4,536 520,187 114.68 Canelones19,865
Cerro LargoUY-CL182113,648 84,698 6.21 Melo53,245
ColoniaUY-CO18166,106 123,203 20.18 Colonia del Sacramento26,231
DuraznoUY-DU1822
(as Entre Ríos Yí y Negro)
11,643 57,088 4.90 Durazno34,372
FloresUY-FS1885
(from San José)
5,144 25,050 4.87 Trinidad21,429
FloridaUY-FD1856
(from San José)
10,417 67,048 6.44 Florida33,640
LavallejaUY-LA1837
(as Minas)
10,016 58,815 5.87 Minas45,638
MaldonadoUY-MA1816
(as San Fernando de Maldonado)
4,793 164,300 34.28 Maldonado62,592
MontevideoUY-MO1816530 1,319,108 2,489 Montevideo1,319,108
PaysandúUY-PA182013,922 113,124 8.13 Paysandú76,429
Río NegroUY-RN1868
(from Paysandú)
9,282 54,765 5.90 Fray Bentos24,406
RiveraUY-RV1884
(as Tacuarembó)
9,370 103,493 11.04 Rivera64,465
RochaUY-RO1880
(from Maldonado)
10,551 68,088 6.45 Rocha25,422
SaltoUY-SA1837
(from Paysandú)
14,163 124,878 8.82 Salto104,028
San JoséUY-SJ18164,992 108,309 21.70 San José de Mayo36,747
SorianoUY-SO1816
(as Santo Domingo Soriano)
9,008 82,595 9.17 Mercedes41,975
TacuarembóUY-TA1837
(from Paysandú)
15,438 90,053 5.83 Tacuarembó54,757
Treinta y TresUY-TT1884
(from Cerro Largo and Lavalleja)
9,676 48,134 4.97 Treinta y Tres25,477

Statutory framework

Establishment of departments

The General Assembly has the powers to create new departments, requiring a supermajority vote of two thirds in both chambers, as provided by the Constitution in article 85. The General Assembly can also define their borders, requiring the same majority.

Politics and governance

The basic statutory framework of departments is defined by Section XVI of the Constitution. Each department has executive and legislative branches, in the form of the Intendant and the Departmental Board respectively. The Municipal Organic Law No. 9515 regulates more specific details of these rules.

Finances

The sources of financial resources of the departmental governments are detailed in article 297 of the Constitution, being the departmental taxes, national taxes whose administration is granted to departments, earnings from services or incomes, money obtained from sanctions, donations, inheritances and bequests received and accepted, and their own part of the national budget that they were granted by budget laws.

Municipalities

See main article: Municipalities of Uruguay. Since 2009 (Law No. 18567 of 13 September 2009),[2] the Uruguayan departments have been subdivided into municipalities. This system has been widely criticized as a waste of resources, due to Uruguay's small population of 3.4 million. The inaugural municipal elections were held in 2010, with municipal officials assuming office later in the year. Currently there are 125 municipalities.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Censos 2011 . Instituto Nacional de Estadística . 10 August 2012 . 11 November 2016.
  2. Web site: Ley Nº 18.567 del 13 de septiembre de 2009 . 2013-08-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091222101444/http://www.presidencia.gub.uy/_web/leyes/2009/09/CM831.pdf . 2009-12-22 . dead .