This is a list of sovereign states by their de jure systems of government, as specified by the incumbent regime's constitutional law. This list does not measure the degree of democracy, political corruption, or state capacity of governments.
Parliamentary systems
Constitutional monarchies
These are systems in which the head of state is a constitutional monarch; the existence of their office and their ability to exercise their authority is established and restrained by constitutional law.
Systems in which a prime minister is the active head of the executive branch of government. In some cases, the prime minister is also the leader of the legislature, while in other cases the executive branch is clearly separated from legislature (although the entire cabinet or individual ministers must step down in the case of a vote of no confidence). The head of state is a monarch who normally only exercises their powers with the consent of the government, the people and/or their representatives (except in emergencies, e.g. a constitutional crisis or a political deadlock).
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Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Semi-constitutional monarchies
The prime minister is the nation's active executive, but the monarch still has considerable political powers that can be used at their own discretion.
Parliamentary republics
In a parliamentary republic, the head of government is selected or nominated by the legislature and is also accountable to it. The head of state is usually called a president and (in full parliamentary republics) is separate from the head of government, serving a largely apolitical, ceremonial role. In these systems, the head of government is usually called the prime minister, chancellor or premier. In mixed republican systems and directorial republican systems, the head of government also serves as head of state and is usually titled president.
In some full parliamentary systems, the head of state is directly elected by voters. Under other classification systems, however, these systems may instead be classed as semi-presidential systems as presidents are always attached to a political party and may have broad powers (despite their weak presidency). Full parliamentary republican systems with presidents being purely ceremonial and neutral with no broad powers usually do not have a directly elected head of state and instead often use either an electoral college or a vote in the legislature to appoint the president.
Parliamentary republics with directly elected ceremonial heads of state
Parliamentary republics with indirectly elected ceremonial heads of state
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Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Parliamentary republics with an executive president
A combined head of state and head of government in the form of an executive president is either elected by the legislature or by the voters from among candidates nominated by the legislature (in the case of Kiribati),
Presidential systems
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In presidential system, a president is both the head of state and head of government, and is elected and remains in office independently of the legislature. There is generally no prime minister, although if one exists, in most cases they serve purely at the discretion of the president.</noinclude>
Presidential republics without a prime minister
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Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Presidential republics with a prime minister
The following countries have presidential systems where the post of prime minister (official title may vary) exists alongside that of the president. The president is often still both the head of state and government and the prime minister's role is to mostly assist the president.
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- (see Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers)
- (see Prime Cabinet Secretary)
- (see Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers)
- (see Chief minister)
Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Hybrid systems
Semi-presidential republics
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In a semi-presidential republic a president exists alongside a prime minister and a cabinet, with the latter two being responsible to the legislature. It differs from a parliamentary system in that it has an executive president independent from the legislature; and from the presidential system in that the cabinet, although named by the president, is responsible to the legislature, which may force the cabinet to resign through a motion of no confidence.</noinclude>
President-parliamentary systems
In a president-parliamentary system, the prime minister and cabinet are dually accountable to the president and the legislature.
Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Assembly-independent republics
In an assembly-independent republic, the executive is elected by the legislature but, once in office, is not politically accountable to it and cannot be removed through a vote of no confidence. This places such systems outside the logic of parliamentary republics, in which the executive depends on continued legislative confidence, and presidential systems, in which the executive is elected independently of the legislature. In comparative politics, this institutional arrangement is commonly described as assembly-independent government, referring to systems that combine legislative election of the executive with its independence from parliamentary dismissal. They may or may not also hold a seat in the legislature.
Directorial republic
employs a Federal Council which jointly exercises the powers of the head of state and government collectively. The Federal Council is elected by the Assembly but is not subject to parliamentary confidence during its fixed term. The President is the Presiding member of the Federal Council in a primus inter pares (first among equals) capacity and has no powers over other members of the directory.
Theocratic republic
combines the forms of a presidential republic, with a president elected by universal suffrage, and a theocracy, with a Supreme Leader who is ultimately responsible for state policy, chosen for life by the elected Assembly of Experts. Candidates for both the Assembly of Experts and the presidency are vetted by the appointed Guardian Council.
Islamic theocracy
has a theocratic system wherein the supreme leader holds unlimited political power and the Quran is used in place of a constitution.
Absolute monarchies
Specifically, monarchies in which the monarch's exercise of power is unconstrained by any substantive constitutional law.
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Non UN members or observers are in italics.
One-party states
States in which political power is by law concentrated within one political party whose operations are largely fused with the government hierarchy (in contrast to states where a multi-party system formally exists, but this fusion is achieved anyway through election fraud or underdeveloped multi-party traditions).
- <small>(Communist Party leads eight minor political parties) (list)</small>
- <small>(Communist Party) (list)</small>
- <small>(People's Front for Democracy and Justice) (list)</small>
- <small>(Workers' Party leads two minor parties) (list)</small>
- <small>(People's Revolutionary Party leads the Front for National Construction) (list)</small>
- ' <small>(Polisario Front)</small>
- <small>(Communist Party leads the Fatherland Front) (list)</small>
Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Provisional governments
States that have a system of government that is in transition or turmoil. These regimes lack a permanent constitution; forms of government under the current interim constitution are stated in parentheses.
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Non-UN members or observers are in italics.
Military juntas
A committee of the nation's military leaders controls the government for the duration of a state of emergency. Constitutional provisions for government are suspended in these states; constitutional forms of government are stated in parentheses.
Systems of internal structure
Unitary states
A state governed as a single power in which the central government is ultimately supreme and any administrative divisions (sub-national units) exercise only the powers that the central government chooses to delegate. The majority of states in the world have a unitary system of government. Of the 193 UN member states, 126 are governed as centralized unitary states, and an additional 40 are regionalized unitary states.
Centralized unitary states
States in which most power is exercised by the central government. What local authorities do exist have few powers.
Regionalized unitary states
States in which the central government has delegated some of its powers to regional authorities, but where constitutional authority ultimately remains entirely at a national level.
- <small>(59 districts, and 1 autonomous republic)</small>
- <small>(9 departments)</small>
- <small>(16 regions)</small>
- <small>(22 provinces, 5 autonomous regions, 4 province-level municipalities, 2 special administrative regions, and 1 claimed province)</small>
- <small>(34 departments, and 1 capital district)</small>
- <small>(14 autonomous districts)</small>
- <small>(5 regions, and 2 self-governing territories)</small>
- <small>(19 regions, and )</small>
- <small>(18 regions, of which 5 are overseas regions)</small>
- <small>(9 regions, and 2 autonomous republics)</small>
- <small>(7 decentralized administrations, and 1 autonomous region)</small>
- <small>(38 provinces, of which 9 have special status)</small>
- <small>(6 districts, Judea and Samaria Area)</small>
- <small>(20 regions, of which 5 are awarded extended autonomy status)</small>
- <small>(47 prefectures)</small>
- <small>(17 regions, 3 cities with region rights)</small>
- <small>(47 counties)</small>
- <small>(4 constituent countries)</small>
- <small>(15 regions)</small>
- <small>(32 districts, 3 municipalities, and 2 autonomous territorial units)</small>
- <small>(16 regions, 1 self-administering territory, and 2 states in free association)</small>
- <small>(15 departments, 2 autonomous regions)</small>
- <small>(10 counties, 1 autonomous city, 2 integral overseas areas, 3 dependencies)</small>
- <small>(20 provinces, 1 autonomous region, and 1 national capital district)</small>
- <small>(25 regions, and 1 province)</small>
- <small>(one autonomous region subdivided into 5 provinces and 113 other provinces and independent cities grouped into 17 other non-autonomous regions)</small>
- <small>(16 voivodeships)</small>
- <small>(18 districts, and 2 autonomous regions)</small>
- <small>(6 districts, and )</small>
- <small>(29 districts, 2 autonomous provinces (one of which is a partially recognized de facto independent state), and 1 autonomous city)</small>
- <small>(9 provinces, and 1 capital territory)</small>
- <small>(9 provinces)</small>
- <small>(8 provinces, 6 special cities, and 1 autonomous province)</small>
- <small>(17 autonomous communities, 15 communities of common-regime, 1 community of chartered regime, 3 chartered provinces, 2 autonomous cities)</small>
- <small>(9 provinces)</small>
- <small>(3 regions, 1 autonomous region, and 1 capital city)</small>
- <small>(21 regions, and )</small>
- <small>(9 regions, 1 autonomous island, 3 boroughs, and 2 cities)</small>
- <small>(24 oblasts, 2 cities with special status, and )</small>
- <small>(4 countries – , , Northern Ireland and , of which 3 have devolved governments – Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales)</small>
- <small>(3 regions, 1 independent city, and one autonomous republic: )</small>
Federation
States in which the national government shares power with regional governments with which it has legal or constitutional parity. The central government may or may not be (in theory) a creation of the regional governments.
- <small>(23 provinces and one autonomous city)</small>
- <small>(six states, two self-governing territories and eight directly-administered territories)</small>
- <small>(nine states)</small>
- <small>(three regions and three linguistic communities)</small>
- <small>(two entities and one district that is a condominium of the two entities)</small>
- <small>(26 states and the Federal District)</small>
- <small>(ten provinces and three territories)</small>
- <small>(10 regions and 2 chartered cities)</small>
- <small>(16 states)</small>
- <small>(28 states and 8 union territories)</small>
- <small>(19 governorates and one region: )</small>
- <small>(13 states and three federal territories)</small>
- <small>(32 states)</small>
- <small>(, , and )</small>
- <small>(seven provinces)</small>
- <small>(36 states and one federal territory: Federal Capital Territory)</small>
- <small>(4 provinces, 2 autonomous territories and 1 federal territory)</small>
- <small>(46 oblasts, 21 republics, nine krais, four autonomous okrugs, two federal cities, one autonomous oblast)</small>
- <small>(Saint Kitts, )</small>
- <small>(seven federal member states)</small>
- <small>(ten states)</small>
- <small>(17 states)</small>
- <small>(26 cantons)</small>
- <small>(seven emirates)</small>
- <small>(50 states, one incorporated territory, and one federal district: )</small>
- <small>(23 states, one capital district, and the )</small>
European Union
The exact political character of the European Union is debated, some arguing that it is (unique), but others arguing that it has features of a federation or a confederation. It has elements of intergovernmentalism, with the European Council acting as its collective "president", and also elements of supranationalism, with the European Commission acting as its executive and bureaucracy.
See also
- List of countries by date of transition to a republican system of government
- List of political systems in France
- List of current heads of state and government
