Subdivisions of Egypt
![]() |
---|
|
Constitution (history) |
Administrative divisions |
Political parties (former) |
![]() |
Egypt is administratively divided into a three-layer hierarchy, with some districts further subdivided, occasionally creating a fourth layer. It follows a centralized system of local government, officially termed local administration, as it functions as a part of the executive branch of the government.[1]
Overview
[edit]Egypt comprises 27 governorates as part of its administrative structure. Each governorate has a capital and is further subdivided into administrative sections (singular: قسم qism, plural: أقسام aqsam) and centers (singular: مركز markaz, plural: مراكز marakiz) depending on whether it is an urban area or rural area respectively.
In governorates with rural areas, marakiz govern multiple local units. The capital of a markaz is typically its largest city, while each local unit is centered around a main village or city. Main villages oversee several smaller villages, which may in turn include farms, hamlets, or satellite villages. If the capital of a markaz is a large city, it is designated as a qism, or it may be divided into multiple aqsam, each managed by a qism head. If the markaz consists of only one qism, the city head oversees its various districts (singular: حي ḥay, plural: أحياء aḥya')' and sub-districts called sheyakha (lit. sheikhdom, شياخة) and appoints their respective leaders.[2]
In urban governorates, which lack rural areas, the entire governorate is considered a city governorate, directly administered by the governor. These governorates are divided into aqsam, each managed by a qism head. This is the case for Cairo, Port Said and Suez. Alexandria operates as a quasi-city governorate, with most of its territory forming a single urban entity, except for one markaz.
Similarly, border and desert governorates are also divided into aqsam, each with a capital in one of the governorate's cities. These aqsam may include small villages, and their administration is headed by a city head, who is appointed directly by the governor.[3]
1. Governorates
[edit]At the top of the hierarchy are 27 governorates (singular: محافظة muḥāfẓa, plural: محافظات muḥāfẓat).[4] Each governorate is headed by a governor, appointed by the President of Egypt, serving at the president’s discretion.
Governors hold the civilian rank of minister and report directly to the prime minister, who chairs the Council of Governors (maglis al-muhafzin) and convenes regular meetings with them.[5][6] The Ministry of Local Development is responsible for coordinating the governors and managing their governorates' budgets.[7]

2. Marakiz and aqsam
[edit]Below the governorates, local administration is divided into:
- Urban: Aqsam (singular: قسم qism, plural: أقسام aqsam)
- Rural: Marakiz (singular: مركز markaz, plural: مراكز marakiz)
Each unit in this tier functions as a county and typically contains a main city or village as its capital. In some cases, large cities inside a markaz (e.g., Giza and Shubra El Kheima) are administered separately as a qism or several aqsam.
3. Districts and villages
[edit]- Urban: Districts (singular: حي ḥay, plural: أحياء aḥya')
- Rural: Villages (singular: قرية qarya, plural: قرى qura)
The village is the smallest local unit in rural communities, and is the equivalent of a district in urban areas. The heads of villages or districts are appointed by the respective governors.[8]
Each district has a governing structure, and for policing and census purposes, districts are covered by qisms (police wards).[9][10]
Sub-districts and special administrative units
[edit]Urban districts are occasionally further divided into sub-district neighborhoods called sheyakha (شياخة) and non-administrative census blocks.[11]
Additionally, two special categories exist outside the traditional administrative structure, but are intended for eventual transfer to local administration:
- New urban communities, governed by the New Urban Communities Authority (NUCA) under the Minister of Housing.[12]
- Agricultural villages, built by the Ministry of Agriculture in its desert land reclamation schemes.[13]
Economic regions
[edit]Separate from administrative divisions, seven economic regions exist for planning purposes, as defined by the General Organization for Physical Planning (GOPP).[14]
History
[edit]Centralization after the 1952 revolution
[edit]Before the 1952 Egyptian revolution, state penetration of the rural areas was limited by the power of local notables. Under Nasser, land reform reduced those notables' socioeconomic dominance, and the peasants were incorporated into cooperatives, which transferred mass dependence from landlords to the government. The extension of officials into the countryside permitted the regime to bring development and services to the village. The local branches of the ruling party, the Arab Socialist Union (ASU), fostered a certain peasant political activism and coopted the local notables — in particular, the village headmen — and checked their independence from the regime.[15]
Until 1979, local government enjoyed limited power in Egypt's highly centralized state. Under the central government, there were twenty-six governorates (27 today), which were subdivided into counties (In Arabic: مركز markaz "center", plural: مراكز marākiz), each of which was further subdivided into towns or villages.[15] At each level, there was a governing structure that combined representative councils and government-appointed executive organs headed by governors, district officers, and mayors, respectively. Governors were appointed by the president, and they, in turn, appointed subordinate executive officers. The coercive backbone of the state apparatus ran downward from the Ministry of Interior through the governors' executive organs to the district police station and the village headman.[15]
Decentralization under Sadat
[edit]State penetration did not retreat under Sadat, though the earlier effort to mobilize peasants and deliver services disappeared as the local party and cooperative withered. However, administrative controls over the peasants remained intact. The local power of the old families and the headmen revived but more at the expense of peasants than of the state. The district police station balanced the notables, and the system of local government (the mayor and council) integrated them into the regime.[15]
Sadat took several measures to administratively decentralize power to the provinces and towns, with limited fiscal and almost no political decentralization. Governors acquired more authority under Law 43/1979,[1] which reduced the administrative and budgetary controls of the central government over the provinces. The elected councils acquired, at least formally, the right to approve or disapprove the local budget. In an effort to reduce local demands on the central treasury, local government was given wider powers to raise local taxes. Local representative councils became vehicles of pressure for government spending, and the soaring deficits of local government bodies had to be covered by the central government. Local government was encouraged to enter into joint ventures with private investors, and these ventures stimulated an alliance between government officials and the local rich that paralleled the infitah alliance at the national level.[citation needed]
Under Mubarak
[edit]Under president Hosni Mubarak's rule (1981–2011), decentralization continued to evolve. Some scholars believed local autonomy was achieved, as local policies often reflected special local conditions. Thus, officials in Upper Egypt often bowed to the powerful Islamic movement there, while those in the port cities struck alliances with importers.[15]
However, others found that local governance proved impotent. Parliamentarians were reduced to the roles of local councillors, lobbying at the parliamentary level for basic local services, while the elected Local Popular Councils (LPC) had a parallel ceremonial role to the appointed Local Executive Councils (LEC), which managed the local departments.[16]
Elections of the LPCs have also been observed to be fraudulent. The ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) won 95 percent of local council seats during the last election in 2008, with 84 percent of the seats won unopposed.[17]
Post-2011 revolution
[edit]After Mubarak was deposed by the popular uprising of the January 2011, parliament and local councils were dissolved pending the writing of a new constitution. The short-lived 2012 constitution and the current 2014 version gave wider local power through more decentralization.[6]
However, by the end of 2022, these provisions had yet to be implemented, as the government prolonged the process of drafting a new local administration law, leaving LPC seats vacant for over a decade.[18][17]
List of governorates
[edit]Egypt is divided into 27 governorates (muhāfazāt) and each has a capital and at least one city.[19] Each governorate is administered by a governor, who is appointed by the President of Egypt and serves at the president's discretion. Most governorates have a population density of more than one thousand per km2, while the three largest have a population density of less than two per km2.[20]
Governorates[21][22] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Area | Population (November 2023 estimate) |
Density (November 2023) |
Capital | ||
km2 | sq mi | per km2 | per sq mi | |||
![]() |
2,300 | 890 | 5,703,824 | 2,480 | 6,400 | Alexandria |
![]() |
62,726 | 24,219 | 1,698,201 | 27 | 70 | Aswan |
![]() |
25,926 | 10,010 | 5,071,485 | 196 | 510 | Asyut |
![]() |
9,826 | 3,794 | 6,940,234 | 706 | 1,830 | Damanhur |
![]() |
10,954 | 4,229 | 3,618,395 | 330 | 850 | Beni Suef |
![]() |
3,085 | 1,191 | 10,456,284 | 3,389 | 8,780 | Cairo |
![]() |
3,538 | 1,366 | 7,058,212 | 1,995 | 5,170 | Mansoura |
![]() |
910 | 350 | 2,023,380 | 2,223 | 5,760 | Damietta |
![]() |
6,068 | 2,343 | 4,141,222 | 682 | 1,770 | Faiyum |
![]() |
1,942 | 750 | 5,483,000 | 2,823 | 7,310 | Tanta |
![]() |
13,184 | 5,090 | 9,534,283 | 723 | 1,870 | Giza |
![]() |
5,067 | 1,956 | 1,482,999 | 293 | 760 | Ismailia |
![]() |
3,467 | 1,339 | 3,731,540 | 1,076 | 2,790 | Kafr El Sheikh |
![]() |
460 | 180 | 1,429,385 | 3,107 | 8,050 | Luxor |
![]() |
166,563 | 64,310 | 580,304 | 3 | 7.8 | Marsa Matruh |
![]() |
32,279 | 12,463 | 6,332,918 | 196 | 510 | Minya |
2,499 | 965 | 4,743,341 | 1,898 | 4,920 | Shibin El Kom | |
![]() |
440,098 | 169,923 | 324,600 | 0.7 | 1.8 | Kharga |
![]() |
28,992 | 11,194 | 544,494 | 19 | 49 | Arish |
![]() |
1,345 | 519 | 835,193 | 621 | 1,610 | Port Said |
![]() |
1,124 | 434 | 6,137,896 | 5,461 | 14,140 | Banha |
![]() |
10,798 | 4,169 | 3,651,215 | 338 | 880 | Qena |
![]() |
119,099 | 45,984 | 409,394 | 3 | 7.8 | Hurghada |
![]() |
4,911 | 1,896 | 8,032,683 | 1,636 | 4,240 | Zagazig |
![]() |
11,022 | 4,256 | 5,714,903 | 518 | 1,340 | Sohag |
![]() |
31,272 | 12,074 | 145,934 | 5 | 13 | El Tor |
![]() |
9,002 | 3,476 | 843,385 | 94 | 240 | Suez |
Total | 1,010,407 | 390,120 | 106,668,704 | 106 | 270 | Cairo |
List of municipal divisions
[edit]
As of 2013, there were 351 subdivisions, of which 177 were aqsam, 162 marakiz, 9 new cities, and 3 police-administered areas. There are also unorganized areas in the Alexandria, Aswan, Asyut, Beheira, Beni Suef, Cairo, Dakahlia, Damietta, Faiyum, Giza, Ismailia, Kafr El Sheikh, Luxor, Minya, Port Said, Qalyubia, Qena, Sharqia, Sohag, and Suez governorates.[24]
Qism | Markaz | New city | Police-administered |
---|---|---|---|
6th of October 1 | Abnub | New Akhmim | Alexandria Port Police Dept. |
6th of October 2 | Abu El Matamir | New Aswan | Port Said Police Dept. |
10th of Ramadan 1 | Abu Hammad | New Asyut | Suez Port Police Dept. |
10th of Ramadan 2 | Abu Hummus | New Borg El Arab | |
15th of May | Abu Kebir | New Faiyum | |
Abdeen | Abu Qirqas | New Minya | |
Abu Radis | Abu Simbel | New Qena | |
Abu Zenima | Abu Tig | New Sohag | |
Agouza | Abu Tisht | New Toshka | |
Ain Shams | Aga | ||
Amreya | Akhmim | ||
Arish 1 | Armant | ||
Arish 2 | Ashmoun | ||
Arish 3 | Aswan | ||
Arish 4 | Asyut | ||
Aswan | Atfih | ||
Asyut 1 | Awlad Saqr | ||
Asyut 2 | Awsim | ||
Ataka | Badr | ||
Azbakeya | Banha | ||
Bab El Sharia | Baris Shurta | ||
Bab Sharq | Basyoun | ||
Badr | Beni Ebeid | ||
Banha | Beni Mazar | ||
Beni Suef | Beni Suef | ||
Bir El Abd | Biba | ||
Borg El Arab | Bilbeis | ||
Bulaq | Bilqas | ||
Bulaq El Dakrur | Birket El Sab | ||
Dahab | Biyala | ||
Damanhur | Burullus | ||
Damietta 1 | Dairut | ||
Damietta 2 | Damanhur | ||
Dekhela | Damietta | ||
Desouk | Dar El Salam | ||
Dokki | Daraw | ||
El Ahram | Deir Mawas | ||
El Arab | Dekernes | ||
El Arbein | Desouk | ||
El Atareen | Dishna | ||
El Basal Port | Diyarb Negm | ||
El Basatin | Edfu | ||
El Dabaa | Edku | ||
El Darb El Ahmar | El Ayyat | ||
El Dawahy | El Badari | ||
El Gamaliya | El Badrashein | ||
El Ganayin | El Bagour | ||
El Gomrok | El Balyana | ||
El Hamam | El Delengat | ||
El Hassana | El Fashn | ||
El Hawamdiya | El Fath | ||
El Kawsar | El Gamaliya | ||
El Khalifa | El Ghanayem | ||
El Labban | El Hamool | ||
El Manakh | El Husseiniya | ||
El Manasra | El Ibrahimiya | ||
El Mansheya | El Idwa | ||
El Marg | El Mahalla El Kubra | ||
El Matareya | El Mahmoudia | ||
El Muski | El Mansha | ||
El Nozha | El Manzala | ||
El Omraniya | El Maragha | ||
El Qanayat | El Matareya | ||
El Qantara El Sharqiya | El Qanater El Khayreya | ||
El Qoseir | El Qantara | ||
El Qurein | El Qusiya | ||
El Raml 1 | El Rahmaniya | ||
El Raml 2 | El Reyad | ||
El Salam | El Saff | ||
El Sayeda Zeinab | El Santa | ||
El Segil | El Senbellawein | ||
El Sharabiya | El Shohada | ||
El Sharq | El Usayrat | ||
El Shorouk | El Waqf | ||
El Tebbin | El Wasta | ||
El Tor | El Zarqa | ||
El Wahat El Bahariya | Esna | ||
El Wahat El Khariga | Faiyum | ||
El Warraq | Faqous | ||
El Weili | Faraskur | ||
El Zaher | Farshut | ||
El Zawya El Hamra | Fayed | ||
El Zohur | Fuwa | ||
Faisal | Girga | ||
Faiyum | Giza | ||
Faqous | Hihya | ||
Gamasa | Hosh Essa | ||
Ganoubi 1 | Ibsheway | ||
Ganoubi 2 | Ihnasiya | ||
Gharb Nubariya | Imbaba | ||
Girga | Ismailia | ||
Giza | Itay El Barud | ||
Hada'iq El Qobbah | Itsa | ||
Hala'ib | Juhayna El Gharbiyah | ||
Heliopolis | Kafr El Dawwar | ||
Helwan | Kafr El Sheikh | ||
Hurghada | Kafr El Zayat | ||
Hurghada 2 | Kafr Saad | ||
Imbaba | Kafr Saqr | ||
Ismailia 1 | Kafr Saad | ||
Ismailia 2 | Kerdasa | ||
Ismailia 3 | Khanka | ||
Kafr El Dawwar | Kom Hamada | ||
Kafr El Sheikh | Kom Ombo | ||
Karmoz | Kotoor | ||
Khusus | Luxor | ||
Luxor | Maghaghah | ||
Maadi | Mahallat Dimna | ||
Mallawi | Mallawi | ||
Mansoura 1 | Manfalut | ||
Mansoura 2 | Mansoura | ||
Marina El Alamein | Mashtool El Souk | ||
Marsa Alam | Matay | ||
Menouf | Menouf | ||
Mersa Matruh | Metoubes | ||
Minya | Minya | ||
Mit Ghamr | Minya El Qamh | ||
Moharam Bek | Minyet El Nasr | ||
Monshat El Nasr | Mit Ghamr | ||
Montaza | Mit Salsil | ||
Mubarak Sharq El Tafrea | Nabaroh | ||
Nasr City 1 | Nag Hammadi | ||
Nasr City 2 | Naqada | ||
New Beni Suef | Nasir Bush | ||
New Cairo 1 | Nasr | ||
New Cairo 2 | Qena | ||
New Cairo 3 | Qift | ||
New Damietta | Quesna | ||
New Salhia | Qus | ||
North Coast | Rosetta | ||
North Coast | Sadat City | ||
Nuweiba | Sahil Salim | ||
Obour | Samalut | ||
Old Cairo | Samanoud | ||
Port Fuad | Saqultah | ||
Port Fuad 2 | Shibin El Kom | ||
Qaha | Shibin El Qanatir | ||
Qalyub | Shirbin | ||
Qasr El Nil | Shubrakhit | ||
Qena | Shurtet El Dakhla | ||
Rafah | Shurtet Farafra | ||
Ras El Bar | Sidfa | ||
Ras Gharib | Sidi Salem | ||
Ras Sidr | Sinnuris | ||
Rod El Farag | Sohag | ||
Safaga | Sumusta El Waqf | ||
Saint Catherine | Tahta | ||
Sallum | Tala | ||
Sers El Lyan | Talkha | ||
Shalateen | Tamiya | ||
Sharm El Sheikh | Tanta | ||
Sheikh Zayed | Tell El Kebir | ||
Sheikh Zuweid | Tima | ||
Shibin El Kom | Timay El Imdid | ||
Shubra | Tukh | ||
Shubra El Kheima 1 | Wadi El Natrun | ||
Shubra El Kheima 2 | Yousef El Seddik | ||
Shurtet El Qasima | Zagazig | ||
Shurtet Rumana | Zefta | ||
Siwa | |||
Sohag 1 | |||
Sohag 2 | |||
Suez | |||
Taba | |||
Tahta | |||
Tanta 1 | |||
Tanta 2 | |||
Tura | |||
Zagazig 1 | |||
Zagazig 2 | |||
Zamalek | |||
Zeitoun |
Demographics
[edit]![]() | Parts of this article (those related to Demographics) need to be updated. The reason given is: Needs updating to 2017 census.(December 2022) |
Urbanization
[edit]CAPMAS[21] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Governorate | % Urban | Population (2016) | Rural | Urban |
Alexandria | 98.8 | 4,812,186 | 56,698 | 4,755,488 |
Aswan | 42.3 | 1,431,488 | 826,543 | 604,945 |
Asyut | 26.5 | 4,245,215 | 3,119,112 | 1,126,103 |
Beheira | 19.5 | 5,804,262 | 4,674,346 | 1,129,916 |
Beni Suef | 23.2 | 2,856,812 | 2,193,871 | 662,941 |
Cairo | 100.0 | 9,278,441 | 0 | 9,278,441 |
Dakahlia | 28.2 | 5,949,001 | 4,271,428 | 1,677,573 |
Damietta | 38.7 | 1,330,843 | 815,244 | 515,599 |
Faiyum | 22.5 | 3,170,150 | 2,456,368 | 713,782 |
Gharbia | 30.0 | 4,751,865 | 3,324,630 | 1,427,235 |
Giza | 58.6 | 7,585,115 | 3,138,310 | 4,446,805 |
Ismailia | 45.4 | 1,178,641 | 643,778 | 534,863 |
Kafr El Sheikh | 23.1 | 3,172,753 | 2,441,246 | 731,507 |
Luxor | 37.8 | 1,147,058 | 713,422 | 433,636 |
Matruh | 70.6 | 447,846 | 131,841 | 316,005 |
Minya | 18.9 | 5,156,702 | 4,183,284 | 973,418 |
Monufia | 20.6 | 3,941,293 | 3,128,460 | 812,833 |
New Valley | 48.0 | 225,416 | 117,180 | 108,236 |
North Sinai | 60.2 | 434,781 | 173,095 | 261,686 |
Port Said | 100.0 | 666,599 | 0 | 666,599 |
Qalyubia | 44.7 | 5,105,972 | 2,825,045 | 2,280,927 |
Qena | 19.7 | 3,045,504 | 2,445,051 | 600,453 |
Red Sea | 95.1 | 345,775 | 17,062 | 328,713 |
Sharqia | 23.1 | 6,485,412 | 4,987,707 | 1,497,705 |
Sohag | 21.4 | 4,603,861 | 3,618,543 | 985,318 |
South Sinai | 51.1 | 167,426 | 81,924 | 85,502 |
Suez | 100.0 | 622,859 | 0 | 622,859 |
Total | 42.7 | 87,963,276 | 50,384,188 | 37,579,088 |
Population density
[edit]Information for population is in thousands, pop density - persons/km2 and area is in km2.
CAPMAS[21] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governorate | Population in thousands (2014-07-01) | Pop. Density (Inhabited Area) | Pop. Density (Total Area) | % Inhabited to Total | Inhabited Area | Total Area |
Alexandria | 4,761 | 2,841.5 | 2,070.0 | 72.8 | 1,675.50 | 2,300.00 |
Aswan | 1,412 | 13,477.1 | 22.5 | 0.2 | 104.77 | 62,726.00 |
Asyut | 4,181 | 2,656.3 | 161.3 | 6.1 | 1,574.00 | 25,926.00 |
Beheira | 5,720 | 806.3 | 582.1 | 72.2 | 7,093.84 | 9,826.00 |
Beni Suef | 2,812 | 2,053.4 | 256.7 | 12.5 | 1,369.41 | 10,954.00 |
Cairo | 9,184 | 48,235.3 | 2,976.8 | 6.2 | 190.40 | 3,085.12 |
Dakahlia | 5,881 | 1,662.1 | 1,662.1 | 100.0 | 3,538.23 | 3,538.23 |
Damietta | 1,316 | 1,968.7 | 1,445.7 | 73.4 | 668.47 | 910.26 |
Faiyum | 3,118 | 1,680.0 | 513.8 | 30.6 | 1,856.00 | 6,068.00 |
Gharbia | 4,698 | 2,418.7 | 2,418.7 | 100.0 | 1,942.34 | 1,942.34 |
Giza | 7,487 | 6,286.3 | 567.9 | 9.0 | 1,191.00 | 13,184.00 |
Ismailia | 1,162 | 229.3 | 229.3 | 100.0 | 5,066.97 | 5,066.97 |
Kafr El Sheikh | 3,132 | 903.5 | 903.5 | 100.0 | 3,466.69 | 3,466.69 |
Luxor | 1,132 | 4,992.7 | 469.8 | 9.4 | 226.73 | 2,409.68 |
Matruh | 437 | 111.4 | 2.6 | 2.4 | 3,921.40 | 166,563.00 |
Minya | 5,076 | 2,104.8 | 157.3 | 7.5 | 2,411.65 | 32,279.00 |
Monufia | 3,890 | 1,596.9 | 1,556.6 | 97.5 | 2,435.93 | 2,499.00 |
New Valley | 222 | 205.1 | 0.5 | 0.2 | 1,082.24 | 440,098.00 |
North Sinai | 428 | 203.7 | 14.8 | 7.2 | 2,100.84 | 28,992.00 |
Port Said | 660 | 499.7 | 490.7 | 98.2 | 1,320.68 | 1,344.96 |
Qalyubia | 5,044 | 4,702.1 | 4,486.4 | 95.4 | 1,072.72 | 1,124.28 |
Qena | 3,001 | 1,724.1 | 277.9 | 16.1 | 1,740.63 | 10,798.00 |
Red Sea | 341 | 4,794.0 | 2.9 | 0.1 | 71.13 | 119,099.13 |
Sharqia | 6,402 | 1,343.7 | 1,303.6 | 97.0 | 4,764.28 | 4,911.00 |
Sohag | 4,536 | 2,845.8 | 411.5 | 14.5 | 1,593.92 | 11,022.00 |
South Sinai | 166 | 9.9 | 5.3 | 53.7 | 16,791.00 | 31,272.00 |
Suez | 615 | 68.3 | 68.3 | 100.0 | 9,002.21 | 9,002.21 |
Total | 86,814 | 1109.1 | 85.9 | 7.8 | 78272.98 | 1010407.87 |
See also
[edit]- List of cities and towns in Egypt
- Economic Regions of Egypt
- List of governorates of Egypt by GDP
- List of governorates of Egypt by Human Development Index
- List of Egyptian cities
- List of political and geographic subdivisions by total area
- ISO 3166-2:EG
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Law 43/1979". The Official Gazette. 1979.
- ^ محافظات مصر. الهيئة العامة للاستعلامات. تاريخ الوصول 6 نوفمبر 2014. Archived 2016-03-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ نظام الإدارة المحلية. الهيئة العامة للاستعلامات. تاريخ الوصول 6 نوفمبر 2014. Archived 2016-08-08 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Governorates of Egypt". ARE Presidency. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
- ^ "The Cabinet - Governors' Meetings". 2020-02-28. Archived from the original on 2020-02-28. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
- ^ a b "Local Administration". State Information Service (SIS).
- ^ "About the Ministry". Ministry of Local Development. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
- ^ "Governor appoints first woman to head municipality in Egypt's Alexandria". Ahram Online. June 20, 2015. Archived from the original on 19 October 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ "Egypt: The Basic Village Services Program" (PDF). USAID. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ Metz, Helen Chapin, ed. (1990). Egypt: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1990. Archived from the original on 3 November 2016. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
- ^ Broadband Networks in the Middle East and North Africa: Accelerating High-Speed Internet Access. World Bank Publication. February 11, 2014. p. 33. ISBN 9781464801136. Archived from the original on 26 November 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ "The New Urban Communities Authority - Tadamun". Retrieved 2022-12-24.
- ^ "محافظة الإسكندرية توافق على نقل ولاية 37 قرية إلى التنمية المحلية". المصري اليوم (in Arabic). 2020-01-02. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
- ^ "Presidential Decree 495/1977". The Official Gazette. 1977.
- ^ a b c d e Metz, Helen Chapin, ed. (1990). Egypt: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
- ^ Ben Nefissa, Sara (2009). "6 Cairo's City Government the Crisis of Local Administration and the Refusal of Urban Citizenship". Cairo Contested: Governance, Urban Space, and Global Modernity Cairo Contested: Governance, Urban Space, and Global Modernity.
- ^ a b Khazbak, Rana (2016-04-28). "In Egypt, there is no local government". Mada Masr. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
- ^ ""المحليات.. 11 سنة غياب"". برلمانى. 2022-10-30. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
- ^ "Governorates of Egypt". Statoids. Archived from the original on 14 October 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
- ^ "Inhabited Population Density By Governorate 1/7/2014" (PDF). CAPMAS Egyptian Figures 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 October 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ a b c "Egypt in Figures 2015" (PDF). CAPMAS. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-19. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
- ^ "Egypt in Figures-Census 2019 - 201937112036_2019 سكان.pdf".
- ^ "Seat of a first-order administrative division". Geonames. Archived from the original on 20 January 2017. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
- ^ Law, Gwillim (November 23, 1999). Administrative Subdivisions of Countries: A Comprehensive World Reference, 1900 Through 1998. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-6097-7. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ "Egypt Markazes". Statoids. Archived from the original on 8 April 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
External links
[edit]- Ministry of Local Development
- Ministry of Local Development (Archived defunct website 2006-2017)
- "Know Your Government", Tadamun Initiative
- Census Data and Maps (1996, 2006, 2017)
- Egypt Administrative Divisions Map, The University of Texas at Austin Library
- History of administrative divisions in Egypt since the French Invasion Archived 2013-05-25 at the Wayback Machine (in Arabic)