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Districts of Germany

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There are 439 German districts (Kreise), administrative units in Germany. The districts are at an intermediate level of administration between the Länder (German states) and the local / municipal levels (Gemeinden). Not to be confused with the larger Regierungsbezirk.

Types of district

The majority of the districts are rural districts, Landkreise, of which there are 323. Cities with more than 100,000 inhabitants (and in some Länder smaller towns) do not usually belong to a district but take over district responsibilities themselves - similar to the concept of independent cities These are known as urban districts (Kreisfreie Städte / Stadtkreise) - cities which constitute a district in their own right, and there are currently (2004) 116 of them, bringing the total number of districts to 439. In North Rhine-Westphalia, there are some cities with more than 100,000 inhabitants which are not urban districts, for example Iserlohn, Recklinghausen, Siegen, Paderborn, Bergisch Gladbach, Witten and Neuss. As an exception, the former rural and urban districts of Hanover (Hannover) in Lower Saxony have been united in 2001 to form the new Region Hannover with about 1,000,000 inhabitants.

Responsibilities

The districts are responsible for the following:

All these tasks are carried out by local (municipal) authorities operating together. Urban districts have these responsibilities and also those of the municipalities.

District parliament

The district parliament, the Kreistag, is the legislative body of the district and is responsible for local self-administration. The parliament is elected directly every five years, except in Bavaria where it is elected every six years, and in Schleswig-Holstein, where it is every four years.

District administration

The executive authority is an officer known as Landrat or Landrätin, who administers the district. In northern Germany, this is also the name of the district administration, in southern Germany it is known as Kreisverwaltung.

See also

 


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