Municipalities of Mexico City
Mexico City is divided into sixteen municipalities (Spanish: municipios),[1] which have regulatory powers and are not fully autonomous in their internal administration. As of 2000, the citizens within a municipality elect by plurality a head of government, as of 2016, known as "municipal president" (Spanish: presidente municipal). Mexico City recorded an official 2010 census tally of 8,851,080 inhabitants.[2]
The municipalities are subdivided into neighborhoods (colonias in Spanish) and in some cases in the southernmost municipalities, also into towns and rural settlements.
Administrative divisions
| Boroughs of the Federal District | ||||
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| Borough | Population (2005)[3] | Population (2010)[4] | Area (km²)[3] | |
| Álvaro Obregón | 706,567 | 727,034 | 96 | |
| Azcapotzalco | 425,298 | 414,711 | 34 | |
| Benito Juárez | 355,017 | 385,439 | 27 | |
| Coyoacán | 628,063 | 620,416 | 54 | |
| Cuajimalpa | 173,625 | 186,391 | 71 | |
| Cuauhtémoc | 521,348 | 531,831 | 33 | |
| Gustavo A. Madero | 1,193,161 | 1,185,772 | 88 | |
| Iztacalco | 395,025 | 384,326 | 23 | |
| Iztapalapa | 1,820,888 | 1,815,786 | 113 | |
| Magdalena Contreras | 228,927 | 239,086 | 64 | |
| Miguel Hidalgo | 353,534 | 372,889 | 46 | |
| Milpa Alta | 115,895 | 130,582 | 288 | |
| Tláhuac | 344,106 | 360,265 | 86 | |
| Tlalpan | 607,545 | 650,567 | 312 | |
| Venustiano Carranza | 447,459 | 430,978 | 34 | |
| Xochimilco | 404,458 | 415,007 | 118 | |
| Total | 8,720,916 | 8,851,080 | 1,487 | |
Politics
| Boroughs of the Federal District | |||
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| Borough | Borough Head[5] | ||
| Álvaro Obregón | |||
| Azcapotzalco | |||
| Benito Juárez | |||
| Coyoacán | |||
| Cuajimalpa | |||
| Cuauhtémoc | |||
| Gustavo A. Madero | |||
| Iztacalco | |||
| Iztapalapa | |||
| Magdalena Contreras | |||
| Miguel Hidalgo | |||
| Milpa Alta | |||
| Tláhuac | |||
| Tlalpan | |||
| Venustiano Carranza | |||
| Xochimilco | |||
Bordering municipalities
The Distrito Federal (Mexico City) as a whole is bordered directly by the following municipalities, going clockwise, starting from the west-southwest.
- Xalatlaco Municipality, State of Mexico
- Ocoyoacac Municipality, State of Mexico
- Huixquilucan Municipality, State of Mexico
- Naucalpan Municipality, State of Mexico
- Tlalnepantla de Baz Municipality, State of Mexico
- Tultitlán Municipality, State of Mexico
- Coacalco de Berriozábal Municipality, State of Mexico
- Ecatepec de Morelos Municipality, State of Mexico
- Tlalnepantla de Baz Municipality, State of Mexico (second occurrence, exclaved part)
- Ecatepec de Morelos Municipality, State of Mexico (second occurrence because of preceding)
- Nezahualcóyotl Municipality, State of Mexico
- La Paz Municipality, State of Mexico
- Valle de Chalco Solidaridad Municipality, State of Mexico
- Chalco Municipality, State of Mexico
- Tenango del Aire Municipality, State of Mexico
- Juchitepec Municipality, State of Mexico
- Tlalnepantla Municipality, State of Morelos
- Tepoztlán Municipality, State of Morelos
- Huitzilac Municipality, State of Morelos
References
- ↑ Agren, David (29 January 2015). "Mexico City officially changes its name to – Mexico City". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
- ↑ 2010 census tables: INEGI
- 1 2 National Institute of Statistics and Geography (2005). "Delimitación de las zonas metropolitanas de México" (PDF) (in Spanish). INEGI official website. Retrieved 28 December 2009.
- ↑ 2010 census tables: INEGI
Select Municipales (Municipal), then Descargar (Download). - ↑ Government of the Federal District (December 2009). "Borough Head" (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 December 2009.
External links
- Government of the Federal District — official website. (Spanish)
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boroughs of Mexico, D. F. |
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