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Provinces are the first-level administrative divisions of Indonesia. It is formerly called the first-level provincial region (provinsi daerah tingkat I) before the Reform era. Provinces have a local government, consisting of a governor (Gubernur) and a regional legislative body (Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Provinsi).
{{Image label begin | image = Australia location map recolored.png | alt = Australia map. Western Australia in the west third with capital Perth, Northern Territory in the north center with capital Darwin, Queensland in the northeast with capital Brisbane, South Australia in the south with capital Adelaide, New South Wales in the northern southeast with capital Sydney, and Victoria in the far ...
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This province is the only landlocked province in Indonesia. South Papua: The Province split from Papua in 2022. West Papua: The province split from Papua in 2003. A 2008 regulation by the national government confirms that special autonomy status in Papua also applies to West Papua. [13] Southwest Papua: The Province split from West Papua in 2022.
This type of city and regency in Indonesia is only found in Jakarta which consisted of five administrative cities and one administrative regency. As of January 2023, there were 514-second-level administrative divisions (416 regencies and 98 cities) in Indonesia. [3] The list below groups regencies and cities in Indonesia by provinces.
File:Indonesia_provinces_english.png licensed with Cc-by-2.5, Cc-by-sa-3.0-migrated, GFDL 2006-01-08T07:54:20Z Golbez 1500x590 (78783 Bytes) Map of the provinces of Indonesian in English. Made by [[User:Golbez]] based on a PD CIA map, using other sources to guesstimate the extent of West Irian Jaya and West Sulawesi. [[Category:Maps of Indonesia]]
Indonesia local elections provinces.png Please note: This image is used in at least one case as a base map for a locator image ; if you change or replace it in a way that moves its geographic features, images superimposed on it at specific locations will no longer be accurate.
English: A map of Indonesian provinces, shaded by the proportion of urban residents divided by the number of total residents in each province as of 2022. Note that four new provinces were created from Papua and West Papua on the same year, which was not included as such on the data.