France is divided into regions, but these regions are modelled after the provinces of the old regime, before the French revolution.
provinces In France, there are Régions and Départements.
France doesn't have states. There are administrative subdivisions (regions and departements) with some power devolved at local level, but these powers are very limited (the law cannot be different for instance).
There are no such things as states in france. There are subdivisions called regions. Paris is located in the Île-de-France region. Regions are divided in departements and Paris is so large it is its own departement. The main differenc between states and regions is that regions have less autonomy.
Colombia is divided into departments, not provinces or states. There are 32 departments and one capital district, Bogotá. Each department has its own local government and administrative responsibilities, while regions are often informally referenced based on geographical and cultural characteristics, such as the Caribbean, Andean, and Amazon regions.
France is divided into regions, but these regions are modelled after the provinces of the old regime, before the French revolution.
provinces In France, there are Régions and Départements.
No, there are no states in the Philippines, just regions and provinces.
States, jurisdictions, regions, realms, divisions, sections...
Japan is divided into regions and further subdivided into prefectures.
Poland is divided into 16 voivodeships (provinces)
States.States
Spain is divided into both provinces and regions. See the related links for listings.
Ireland is divided into 4 provinces and into 32 counties
Japan is divided into regions and further subdivided into prefectures.
The Philippines is divided into 17 regions composed of 81 provinces. Some of the provinces are further divided into cities. There are no states in the Philippines; the country uses provinces as its primary political subdivision.
There are no states in France. The subdivision is only an administrative one, into region (formerly provinces) which have no laws of their own.