States are owned by australian but Territories are owned by other country for eg: Great Britian.
1. States have the right to vote, territories don't 2. A territory is governed by the federal government, while a state can have its own laws 3. Territories don't have representation in Congress, while states do
ACT Australian capital territory
People have their own opinion about different places so there is really no best state or territory in Australia.
buffer state
ateratory is smaller then a cunrty
Bearing in mind that the southernmost territory is completely different to the southernmost state, then the answer to the question is the Australian Antarctic Territory. Although this territory is recognised as a legitimate claim, there are those who dispute it: in which case, the southernmost territory is Macquarie Island.If the question ally means which is the southernmost state, then that is the island state of Tasmania.
No it does not. The Australian Capital Territory is a quite separate territory from New South Wales, and the two have different state/territory leaders and representatives.
Enclave: a piece of territory surrounded by another territory of a different state.
Florida was a territory state
The sodomy law in Tasmania was repealed in 1997. Tasmania was the last state or territory to have such a law.
A state is a fully self-governing political entity within a country, with its own government and constitution. A territory is an area controlled by a country but does not have the same level of self-governance as a state.
In 1846, what was known as the Territory of Oregon, was divided between Great Britain and the U.S. Oregon would eventually become a U.S. state in 1859.