Districts Of Serbia

Okruzi are the Districts of Serbia. Okrug is a term to denote administrative subdivision in some Slavic states. Its etymology is similar to German Kreis, circle (in the meaning of administrative division) (although translated in German as Bezirk): okrug is literally something "encircling". In subdivisions of Serbia, the term is translated as district, sometimes as county.

Serbia organization

The territorial order of the Republic of Serbia is regulated by the Law on Territorial Organization and Local Self-Government, adopted in the National Assembly on July 24, 1991. Under the Law, the municipalities, cities and settlements make the bases of the territorial organization. By its Enactment of 29 January 1992, the Government of the Republic of Serbia defined the state administration affairs that shall be run by the competent Ministries out of their seats, within the districts as regional centers of state authority. The Republic of Serbia is divided into 29 districts.

Districts

Central Serbia

Vojvodina

Kosovo

Note

All official material made by Government of Serbia is public by law. Information was taken from official website.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
risas en vacaciones
buchberger's algorithm
gary wilkinson
evocation
nm (unix)
the pett dynasty
bachelor party
four dimensions
avodah zarah
lebedev physical institute
cacophony
multivariate division algorithm
richard adams (traidcraft)
pyotr nikolaevich lebedev
yellow jessamine
snfellsnes
monomial order
ronald hutton
speedcore
lessor
muirfield village
larry ritchie
sybil (book)
granular material
south yarra railway station, melbourne
letcher
martin clark
hawksburn railway station, melbourne
status class
north backa district
axiom of constructibility
officialdom
toorak railway station, melbourne
tony jones
central banat district
north banat district
miho komatsu
darwine
cliff wilson
south banat district
rugby football union
west backa district
sovereign of the seas
south backa district