STATES OF AUSTRIA


Austria is a federal republic made up of nine states, known in German as '''Länder''' (singular '''Land'''). Since ''Land'' is also the German word for "country", the term '''Bundesländer''' ("Federal States"; singular '''Bundesland''') is often used instead to avoid ambiguity. The Constitution of Austria uses both terms. In English, the term ''(Bundes)land'' is commonly rendered as "state" or "province".

Contents
Federalism and state responsibilities
Geography
State populations and capitals
Historical development
See also

Federalism and state responsibilities


Each Austrian state has an elected legislature, the ''Landtag'', a state government, the ''Landesregierung'', and a governor, the ''Landeshauptmann''. Elections are held every five years (six years in Upper Austria). The state constitution, among other things, determines how the seats in the state government are assigned to political parties, with most states having a system of proportional representation based on the number of delegates in the ''Landtag'' in place. The ''Landeshauptmann'' is always elected by the ''Landtag'', meaning that it may be necessary to form a coalition in order to secure the election of a particular candidate.
However, Austrian federalism is usually considered largely notional, as the states are granted comparatively little actual legislative autonomy. On one hand, federal legislature takes precedence over state legislature in most matters of practical importance, including, but not limited to, criminal law, civil law, corporate law, most other aspects of economic law, education, academia, welfare, telecommunications, and the health care system. On the other hand, Austria's states have no stand-alone judiciary, the federal constitution defining jurisdiction to be exclusively federal matter.
This is largely due to historic reasons, as central power during the time of the empire was largely concentrated in Vienna. This historical development is in stark contrast to developments in Germany.
However, the state governor (''Landeshauptmann'') is also in charge of the administration of much of federal administrative law within the respective state, which makes this post an important political position. Furthermore, state competences include zoning laws, planning issues and public procurement on the regional level, which adds considerable weight to state politics. As a practical matter, there have been cases where states have been able to block projects endorsed by the federal government, as in the case of a railway tunnel that was to be built below the Semmering.
Still, Austrian ''Länder'' are formally and practically endowed with a much smaller degree of statehood than American or even German states are. Even so, Austrians tend to passionately identify with their respective ''Land'' and often defend what little independent governance their states have. It is not unheard of for Austrians to consider themselves, for instance, Tyrolean first, Austrian second.

Geography


The nine states of Austria, listed alphabetically by official German name, are:
State (''Bundesland'') Capital
States of Austria
English ''Native'' English ''Native''
'1' Burgenland Eisenstadt
'2' Carinthia ''Kärnten'' Klagenfurt
'3' Lower Austria ''Niederösterreich'' St. Pölten
'4' Upper Austria ''Oberösterreich'' Linz
'5' Salzburg Salzburg
'6' Styria ''Steiermark'' Graz
'7' Tyrol ''Tirol'' Innsbruck
'8' Vorarlberg Bregenz
'9' Vienna ''Wien'' Vienna ''Wien''

Provincial Government

The biggest part of the land in the states of Upper Austria, Lower Austria, Vienna, and Burgenland are situated in the Danube valley and thus consist almost completely of accessible and easily arable terrain. The other five states, in contrast, are located in the Alps and thus comparatively unsuitable for agriculture. Their terrain is also relatively unfavourable to heavy industry and long-distance trade. Accordingly, the population of what now is the Republic of Austria has been concentrated in the former four states since prehistoric times. Austria's most densely populated state is the city state of Vienna, the heart of what is Austria's only metropolitan area. Lower Austria only ranks fourth with regard to population density even though containing Vienna's suburbs; this is due to large areas of land predominantly agricultural. The alpine state of Tyrol, the less alpine but geographically secluded state of Carinthia, and the definitely not alpine but near-exclusively agricultural state of Burgenland are Austria's least densely populated states. The alpine state of Vorarlberg is an anomaly.

State populations and capitals


The following ranked list of Austrian states cites official Statistik Austria population estimates from October 1 2006 [1]:
State Capital Population Area (km²) Pop. density Cities Towns
'1' Vienna Vienna '1,660,534' 415 4,001.3 1 0
'2' Lower Austria Sankt Pölten '1,588,545' 19,178 82.8 74 499
'3' Upper Austria Linz '1,405,986' 11,982 117.3 29 416
'4' Styria Graz '1,203,986' 16,392 73.5 34 509
'5' Tyrol Innsbruck '698,472' 12,648 55.2 11 268
'6' Carinthia Klagenfurt '560,753' 9,536 58.8 17 115
'7' Salzburg Salzburg '529,085' 7,154 74.0 10 109
'8' Vorarlberg Bregenz '364,611' 2,601 140.2 5 91
'9' Burgenland Eisenstadt '280,350' 3,966 70.7 13 158

The population figures cited are generally assumed to be accurate to within five percent and to remain so until the next census, scheduled for 2011. Areas are given in square kilometres, population density is expressed in inhabitants per square kilometre. For the purpose of the above list, a "city" is a community defined to be a city by Austrian law; a "town" is a community not defined to be a city. Many of Austria's "cities" have population figures on the order of ten thousand inhabitants; some are even smaller.

Historical development


In terms of boundaries, the present-day state of Salzburg is coterminous with the former Austro-Hungarian Duchy of Salzburg. Austria-Hungary was the extensive multiethnic empire with a German-speaking nucleus , which emerged as the Republic of Austria after the empire was torn apart by nationalist and republicanist forces around the end of World War I. The states of Upper Austria and Lower Austria are essentially equivalent to what were formerly the two semi-autonomous halves of the Archduchy of Austria, a principality which formed the empire's historic heartland and which had to cede significant tracts of land to Czechoslovakia in the aftermath of the empire's dissolution. Similarly, the state of Carinthia descends from the Duchy of Carinthia, the state of Styria descends from the Duchy of Styria, and the state of Tyrol descends from the Princely County of Tyrol; these provinces had to cede territories to Italy and Yugoslavia when Austria emerged in its present form. Also, the state of Vorarlberg had been a part of the County of Tyrol up until 1918. The city state of Vienna was a part of Lower Austria up until 1921. The state of Burgenland is a more or less artificially agglutinated entity consisting of four German-speaking districts of Hungary that were ceded to Austria in 1920-1921.

See also



Distribution of seats in the Austrian Landtage

Districts of Austria

Flags of Austrian states

Coats of arms of the Austrian states



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