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In terms of administrative regions, similar to the administrative divisions of China, Japan is divided into prefectures.
The capital is the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, which has jurisdiction over 23 wards, 26 cities, 1 county, and 4 branch offices (island towns and 8 villages).
Hokkaido has 34 cities and 178 towns and villages.
The two prefectures are Kyoto Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture. Kyoto Prefecture has 6 prefectures and 68 municipalities, and is located on the island of Honshu and belongs to the region. Osaka Prefecture is located in a similar geographical location to Kyoto, with 33 cities, 24 wards, 5 prefectures, 9 towns, and 1 village.
There are still 43 counties distributed throughout the country, and the counties under the jurisdiction of the region are located.
Tohoku Prefecture: Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Akita, Yamagata, Fukushima.
Kanto Prefecture Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Kanagawa.
Chubu Prefecture: Niigata, Toyama, Ishikawa, Fukui, Yamanashi, Nagano, Gifu, Shizuoka, Aichi.
Prefecture Mie Prefecture, Shiga Prefecture, Hyogo Prefecture, Nara Prefecture, Wakayama Prefecture.
Chugoku Localities Tottori Prefecture, Shimane Prefecture, Okayama Prefecture, Hiroshima Prefecture, Yamaguchi Prefecture.
Shikoku Prefecture: Tokushima Prefecture, Kagawa Prefecture, Ehime Prefecture, Kochi Prefecture.
Kyushu Regions Fukuoka, Saga, Nagasaki, Kumamoto, Oita, Miyazaki, Kagoshima.
Okinawa place Okinawa Prefecture.
The above are divided by administrative region.
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Administrative divisions] It is divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo: Tokyo Province: Tokyo Province) (Hokkaido: Hokkaido Prefecture) (Osaka Prefecture, Kyoto Prefecture: Kyoto) and 43 prefectures (provinces), with cities, towns, and villages.
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Hokkaido Tohoku.
Hokkaido, Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Akita, Yamagata, Fukushima.
Kanto. Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama, Chiba, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Yamanashi.
Shinetsu Hokuriku.
Niigata, Nagano, Toyama, Ishikawa, Fukui.
East China Sea. Aichi Gifu Shizuoka Mie.
. Osaka, Hyogo, Kyoto, Shiga, Nara, Wakayama.
China. Tottori, Shimane, Okayama, Hiroshima, Yamaguchi.
Shikoku. Tokushima, Kagawa, Ehime, Kochi.
Kyushu Okinawa.
Fukuoka, Saga, Nagasaki, Kumamoto, Oita, Miyazaki, Kayoshima, Okinawa.
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1. Metropolis, province, prefecture and county.
2. Branch offices (set up in some areas).
3. Counties (imaginary level), cities (as well as cities designated by government decree, medium-core cities, and special cities), and special districts.
4. Town, village, ward (ward of city designated by ordinance).
In some remote areas and remote islands, prefecture administrative offices have been set up as "branch offices", and in recent years, they have been restructured and renamed "prefectural bureaus" and "revitalization bureaus".
In the 1920s, the prefecture at the same level as the city was reduced to a virtual level, but it still has functions such as a list of addresses, a wide administrative circle, and the division of prefectural council elections.
First-class administrative districts.
Japan's capital, provinces, prefectures, and prefectures are parallel first-level administrative regions, directly under ****, and all have autonomy. The country is divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo Prefecture (Hokkaido), 2 prefectures (Osaka Prefecture, Kyoto Prefecture) and 43 prefectures (Japan's **** department is called "province", such as "Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare", etc.), and it is divided into cities, towns, and villages.
Its offices are called "government offices", i.e., "metropolitan offices", "provincial offices", "prefectural offices", and "prefectural offices", and the chief executive is called "governors". There are a number of cities, towns and villages under the first-level administrative district. Its offices are called "government offices", i.e., "city offices", "town offices", and "village offices", and the chief executive is called "mayor", "town chief", and "village head".
The above content refers to: Encyclopedia - Administrative Divisions of Japan.
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Forty-seven jurisdictions.
The administrative divisions of this layer are collectively referred to as prefectures. One is Tokyo, the political, economic, and cultural center of Japan, and the other is Hokkaido.
Nifu is Kyoto Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture, which are the historical and economic centers of Kansai.
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There are two levels of administrative divisions and levels in Japan: prefectures, provinces, prefectures, and prefectures (regional public bodies), and cities, towns, villages, and special wards (basic local public bodies). Japan's administrative division system was established in 1871 with the Meiji ** policy of abolishing feudal domains and prefectures.
Japan's 47 first-class administrative regions: divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo: Tokyo Province (Hokkaido:.)
Hokkaido Prefecture (Osaka, Kyoto: Kyoto) and 43 prefectures (県) are divided into cities, towns, and villages.
In some remote areas and remote islands, prefecture administrative offices have been set up as "branch offices", and in recent years, they have been restructured and renamed "prefectural bureaus" and "revitalization bureaus". In the 1920s, the "county" at the same level as the city was reduced to a virtual level, and it still had functions such as recording addresses, wide-area administrative circles, and dividing the election of prefectural councils.
Japan's First-Level Administrative Planning:
Japan's 47 first-class administrative regions: divided into 1 prefecture (Tokyo: Tokyo Province (Hokkaido:.)
Hokkaido Prefecture (Osaka, Kyoto: Kyoto) and 43 prefectures (県) are divided into cities, towns, and villages.
In some remote areas and remote islands, prefecture administrative offices have been set up as "branch offices", and in recent years, they have been restructured and renamed "prefectural bureaus" and "revitalization bureaus". In the 1920s, the "county" at the same level as the city was reduced to a virtual level, and it still had functions such as recording addresses, wide-area administrative circles, and dividing the election of prefectural councils.
The above content refers to: Encyclopedia - Administrative Divisions of Japan.
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Japan is divided into 47 jurisdictions: 1 prefecture, 1 province, 2 prefectures, and 43 prefectures, and the administrative divisions of this layer are collectively referred to as prefectures, provinces, prefectures, and prefectures, which are similar to the administrative divisions of provinces and municipalities in Japan.
1. Tokyo is the political, economic, and cultural center of Japan;
1 is Hokkaido;
The 2 prefectures are Kyoto Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture, which are the historical and economic centers of Kansai;
The 43 counties are equivalent to the provinces of our country. In addition to Hokkaido, the prefecture, prefecture, and prefecture are divided into two systems: one is the city system, which includes cities, towns (streets), chomes (sections), and banchi (numbers);
The other is the rural system, which has counties (districts), towns (towns), and villages. Therefore, in Japan, the prefecture is large and the city is small, so don't think that the governor of Kanagawa Prefecture (prefectural magistrate) is younger than the mayor of Yokohama.
History of Japan's Administrative Divisions:
Before the Meiji era, Japan was still a world of 300 feudal clans. After the successful fall of the curtain, Japan began to innovate.
In the second year of the Meiji era (1869), thanks to the efforts of Okubo Toshitsu and Kido Takayoshi, each feudal clan successively submitted a petition to the Imperial Court requesting the return of the copyright. The Royalties also enabled the Meiji ** to peacefully withdraw the royalties of the feudal domains and completely abolish the lordship system.
In July of the fourth year of the Meiji era (1871), the feudal domain was abolished, and more than 260 feudal domains were abolished throughout the country, and it was divided into 1 prefecture and 3 prefectures and 302 prefectures, which were adjusted to 3 prefectures and 72 prefectures in November of the same year, and then adjusted to 3 prefectures and 43 prefectures in the 23rd year of the Meiji era (1890), and the governor of the prefecture was appointed by ****.
In the 100 years since, with the exception of Tokyo Prefecture, which was renamed the Tokyo Metropolitan Government in 1943, there have been no major changes to Japan's headquarters.
The above content refers to Encyclopedia-Japan.
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Legal Analysis: The administrative regions of Japan are divided into 1 prefecture, 1 province, 2 prefectures, and 43 prefectures.
Legal basis: National Defense Law of the People's Republic of China
Article 30 The territorial land, territorial waters and airspace of the People's Republic of China are sacred and inviolable. The country should build strong and stable modern border, coastal and air defense, and adopt effective defense and management measures to safeguard the security of territorial land, territorial waters and airspace, and safeguard the country's maritime rights and interests. The State shall take necessary measures to safeguard the security of its activities, assets and other interests in space, electromagnetism, cyberspace and other major security fields.
Article 32 The State shall, in accordance with the needs of defense in frontier, coastal, air and other major security areas, strengthen the building of defense forces and build national defense facilities such as for operations, command, communications, measurement and control, navigation, protection, transportation, and support. The people's military organs at all levels shall ensure the construction of national defense facilities and protect the safety of national defense facilities in accordance with the provisions of laws and regulations.
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Japan's administrative divisions include prefectures, provinces, prefectures, and sub-prefectures (some districts), counties, cities, special districts, towns, villages, and districts.
Japan's 47 first-class administrative regions: 1 prefecture (Tokyo: Tokyo: Hokkaido (Osaka Prefecture).
Osaka, Kyoto Prefecture: Kyoto) and 43 prefectures (県), which are divided into cities, towns, and villages. In some remote areas and remote islands, prefecture administrative offices have been set up as "branch offices", and in recent years, they have been restructured and renamed "prefectural bureaus" and "revitalization bureaus".
In the 1920s, prefectures at the same level as cities in Japan began to be virtually regraded, but they still have functions such as address records, wide administrative circles, and election divisions for prefectural councils.
In 1956, in response to the emergence of a metropolis, a city system was established in 1956 to designate a city by government ordinance and transfer some of the affairs that had previously belonged to the prefecture to the government ordinance. Municipalities are set up under the government ordinance to establish districts (administrative districts, without legal personality), and the name of the county may be omitted from the address list.
Major cities in Japan
1. Tokyo. Tokyo's former name was Edo, but it was renamed Tokyo in July of Keio 4. On March 28, 1869, the capital of Japan was moved from Kyoto to Tokyo.
It has been one of Japan's major cities since the Tokugawa shogunate, and after the Meiji Restoration was renamed Tokyo, it developed into a hub for Japan's politics, economy, culture, transportation, and many other fields. Tokyo is also the largest city in Asia.
2. Kyoto. Kyoto, also known as Heiankyo, Keiraku, Luoyang, is located in western Japan, southern Kyoto Prefecture, and is an important city in the Osaka metropolitan area, one of the three major metropolitan areas in Japan.
3. Yokohama. Yokohama is an international port city in eastern Kanagawa Prefecture and the seat of the prefectural government office (administrative center) of Kanagawa Prefecture, and is also designated as one of the cities designated by government ordinance. The city has the second largest population in Japan after the Tokyo Metropolitan Area (Tokyo 23 wards) and is the most populous municipal-level administrative district.
Refer to Encyclopedia - Japan with the contents on the cave shed.
Administrative legitimacy refers to "the law takes precedence and the law is reserved". The so-called legal priority means that the law has provisions, and administrative law enforcement organs or administrative law enforcement personnel must exercise their duties and cannot waive their powers. The so-called legal reservation means that the law does not provide for powers, and administrative law enforcement organs or administrative law enforcement personnel cannot do it. >>>More
Let's talk about their nature and differences.
Administrative reconsideration refers to the activity of a state administrative organ in the exercise of its administrative functions and powers and a dispute with the other party that is the object of management, and on the basis of the application of the other party, the state administrative organ at the next higher level or other organs prescribed by law shall examine and make a decision on the specific administrative act that caused the dispute in accordance with the law. >>>More
The avenues for administrative remedies are:
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You may apply for administrative reconsideration or, if there is evidence, you may apply for a retrial.
Difficulty in administrative law enforcement refers to the difficulties or obstacles encountered by administrative organs and organizations authorized by laws and regulations in the implementation of national laws and regulations, which make it difficult for administrative laws and regulations to be fully and effectively implemented and enforced in the life of the state and society. >>>More