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Encyclopedia > Territories

A territory is a defined area (including land and waters), usually considered to be a possession of an animal, person, organization, or institution.

  • In biology, an organism which defends an area against intrusion (usually from members of its own species) is said to be territorial. For further details see territory (animal)
  • In politics, a territory is an area of land under the jurisdiction of a governmental authority. Territory can, though, include any geographical area under the jurisdiction of a sovereign and does not have a political division status. The remainder of this article deals with political territories.
  • In psychology, environmentalists study territorial behaviour to understand which territory an organism defends and why. Territorial behaviour is defined as:
The actions or reactions of a person or animal in response to external threats towards the space that is defended by that person or animal.

Types of territories include:

  • A legally administered territory, which is a non-sovereign geographic area that has come under the authority of another government. For example, American Samoa is a territory of the government of the United States. With regard to the Canadian provinces and territories, the major difference between a Canadian province and a Canadian territory is that the federal government has more direct control over the territories, while the provinces are run by provincial governments empowered by the constitution. See also Australian States and Territories. Under British rule, Hong Kong was often referred to as a territory, rather than a colony from about the 1960s onwards.
  • An occupied territory which is a region that is under the military control of an outside power that has not annexed the region. An example of an occupied territory is Iraq after the American invasion of 2003 or Germany after World War II.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Territory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (412 words)
In politics, a territory is an area of land under the jurisdiction of a governmental authority.
An occupied territory which is a region that is under the military control of an outside power that has not annexed the region.
The district of the Chatham Islands Council is termed the Chatham Islands Territory, although it is in all legal senses an integral part of New Zealand.
Northern Territory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1272 words)
The Northern Territory was part of New South Wales from 1825 to 1863 and part of South Australia from 1863 to 1911.
The territory is represented in the Commonwealth parliament by two members in the House of Representatives, currently Warren Snowdon for the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and David Tollner for the Country Liberal Party (CLP), and two members in the Senate, currently Trish Crossin for the ALP and Nigel Scullion for the CLP.
To the north of that lies the Arafura Sea, and to the east lies Arnhem Land, whose regional centre is Maningrida on the Liverpool River delta.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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