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Administrative divisions of New Caledonia

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(Redirected from Provinces of New Caledonia)

The French sui generis collectivity of New Caledonia is divided into three provinces, which in turn are divided into 33 communes. There is also a system of eight tribal areas for the indigenous Kanak people, and three decentralized subdivisions.

Provinces

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New Caledonia is divided into three provinces. The North and South Provinces are located on the New Caledonian mainland, while the Loyalty Islands Province is a series of islands off the mainland.

Province name
(name in French)
Capital city Population
(2019)
Loyalty Islands Province
(Province des îles Loyauté)
Lifou 18,353
North Province (Province Nord) Koné 49,910
South Province (Province Sud) Nouméa 203,144

Each province has its own flag and emblem and has considerable powers, including all powers that are not explicitly the prerogative of either the territorial Congress of New Caledonia in Nouméa or parliament of the French Republic in Paris. The borders and powers of the provinces were outlined in 1988 as part of the Matignon Accords.

The Loyalty Islands Province has its seat at in the commune of Lifou, and the provincial seat of the North Province is at Koné (although physically located closer to the town of Pouembout). The South Province has its provincial seat at Nouméa, although La Foa also serves as the seat of some administrations (see subdivisions section below).

Communes

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New Caledonia is subdivided into 33 communes (municipalities), which in most cases predate the provinces. One commune, Poya, was divided between the two mainland provinces as part of the Matignon Accords. On the list below, communal seats are shown in parentheses if different from the commune name.

Key
  South Province
  North Province
  Loyalty Islands Province
  part of both provinces
provincial capital
capital of New Caledonia
Administrative divisions of New Caledonia:   North Province   South Province   Loyalty Islands Province. The numbers correspond to the list of communes to the left.
No. on Map Commune Population (2019)
1 Thio 2,524
2 Yaté 1,667
3 L'Île-des-Pins 2,037
4 Le Mont-Dore 27,620
5 Nouméa 94,285
6 Dumbéa 35,873
7 Païta 24,563
8 Boulouparis 3,315
9 La Foa 3,552
10 Sarraméa 572
11 Farino 712
12 Moindou 681
13 Bourail 5,531
14 Poya 2,802
15 Pouembout 2,752
16 Koné 8,144
17 Voh 2,856
18 Kaala-Gomen 1,803
19 Koumac 3,981
20 Poum 1,435
21 Belep 867
22 Ouégoa 2,118
23 Pouébo 2,144
24 Hienghène 2,454
25 Touho 2,380
26 Poindimié 5,006
27 Ponérihouen 2,420
28 Houaïlou 3,955
29 Kouaoua 1,304
30 Canala 3,701
31 Ouvéa 3,401
32 Lifou 9,195
33 Maré 5,757

Other types of divisions

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The hierarchy of New Caledonia's administrative subdivisions, shown in a triangle.

Tribal areas (aires coutumières)

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In addition, a parallel layer of administration exists for Kanak tribal affairs; these are called aires coutumières ("tribal areas") and are eight in number. Their jurisdiction does not encompass non-Kanaks living within these zones. The tribal areas more or less correspond to the indigenous language areas and/or areas of pre-French tribal alliances.

Subdivisions

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There are also three subdivisions, simply known as subdivisions in French, with the same names and boundaries as the three provinces, except that the commune of Poya is entirely within the North Subdivision. Unlike the provinces, which are full political divisions with their own assemblies and executives, the subdivisions are merely decentralized divisions of the French central state, akin to the arrondissements of Metropolitan France, with a Deputy Commissioner of the Republic (commissaire délégué de la République), akin to a subprefect of Metropolitan France, in residence in each subdivision's chief town.

The subdivision chief towns are the same as the provincial capitals except in the South Subdivision where the chief town is La Foa, whereas the capital of the South Province is Nouméa. Thus, although the provincial assembly of the South Province sits in Nouméa, the South Subdivision's Deputy Commissioner of the Republic is in residence in La Foa. This was decided in order to counterbalance the overwhelming weight of Nouméa in New Caledonia.

See also

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