Municipalities of Mexico City

Mexico City is divided into sixteen mayoraltys (Spanish: alcaldías),[1] which have regulatory powers and are not fully autonomous in their internal administration. As of 2000, the citizens within a mayoralty elect by plurality a head of government, as of 2016, known as "mayor" (Spanish: alcalde). 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 Mexico City
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 de Morelos 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 Mexico City
Borough Borough Head[5]
Álvaro Obregón María Antonieta Hidalgo Torres
Azcapotzalco Pablo Moctezuma Barragán
Benito Juárez Christian von Roehrich
Coyoacán Valentín Maldonado Salgado
Cuajimalpa Miguel Ángel Salazar Martínez
Cuauhtémoc Ricardo Monreal Ávila
Gustavo A. Madero Víctor Hugo Lobo Román
Iztacalco Carlos Enrique Estrada Meraz
Iztapalapa Dione Anguiano
Magdalena Contreras José Fernando Mercado Guaida
Miguel Hidalgo Xóchitl Gálvez
Milpa Alta Jorge Alvarado Galicia
Tláhuac Rigoberto Salgado Vázquez
Tlalpan Claudia Sheinbaum
Venustiano Carranza Israel Moreno Rivera
Xochimilco Avelino Méndez Rangel

Bordering municipalities

The Distrito Federal (Mexico City) as a whole is bordered directly by the following municipalities, going clockwise, starting from the west-southwest.

References

  1. Agren, David (29 January 2015). "Mexico City officially changes its name to – Mexico City". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  2. 2010 census tables: INEGI
  3. 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.
  4. 2010 census tables: INEGI
    Select Municipales (Municipal), then Descargar (Download).
  5. Government of the Federal District (December 2009). "Borough Head" (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 December 2009.

External links

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