Mexico 's states classify their settlements in a variety of fashions:
11-480: Manuel Benavides is a small town and seat of the municipality of Manuel Benavides , in the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua . As of 2010, the town had a population of 916, up from 200 as of 2005. It is a rural border town on the U.S.-Mexico border , with the town of Redford , Texas , directly opposite, on the U.S. side of the border. This article about a location in the Mexican state of Chihuahua
22-659: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Settlement classification in Mexico Under Article 106 of the Municipal Law of the State of Aguascalientes, [1] the state defines its settlements as follows: According to Article 10 of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Baja California Sur, [2] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 12 of
33-596: Is a function of the State Congress . According to Article 13 bis of the Municipal Code of the State of Chihuahua, [5] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 22 of the Municipal Code for the State of Coahuila de Zaragoza, [6] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 13 of the Organic Law of Free Municipalities of the State of Colima, [7]
44-545: The Municipal Code for the State of Tamaulipas, [24] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Tlaxcala, [25] the state classifies its settlements in terms of their population and their provision of certain basic public services: According to Article 11 of the Organic Law of the Free Municipality of the State of Veracruz, [26] the state categorises its settlements as follows: According to Article 12 of
55-572: The Organic Municipal Law of the Free and Sovereign State of San Luis Potosí, [21] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to article 12 of the Organic Municipal Law of the Free and Sovereign State of Sinaloa, [22] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to article 9 of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Tabasco, [23] the state classifies its settlements in terms of their population and their provision of certain basic public services: According to Article 13 of
66-400: The Organic Municipal Law of the State of Querétaro, [19] the state classifies its settlements in terms of their populations and their provision of certain basic public services (schools, clinics, abattoirs, graveyards, etc.): According to the Organic Municipal Law of the Free and Sovereign State of Quintana Roo, [20] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to article 9 of
77-587: The Organic Municipalities Law of the State of Campeche, [3] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to the Law on the Political and Administrative Classification of Population Centres in the State of Chiapas, [4] the state classifies its settlements as follows: To serve as a municipal seat, a settlement must be either a city or town. The granting of all settlement statuses
88-406: The state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 6 of the Organic Law of the Free Municipality of the State of Durango, [8] the state categorises its settlements as follows: According to Article 23 of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Guanajuato, [9] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 1 of the Law number 59, territorial division of
99-487: The state classifies its settlements as follows: Elevating a settlement to a city status is a function of the State Congress . The lower statuses can be granted by municipal authorities. According to Article 1 of the Organic Law of the Territorial Division of Michoacán, [14] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 23 of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Morelos, [15]
110-551: The state classifies its settlements as follows: Under the Law of Political Categories for Settlements in the State of Nayarit, [16] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to the Municipal Law of the State of Oaxaca, [17] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Puebla, [18] the state classifies its settlements in terms of their populations and their provision of certain basic public services (schools, clinics, abattoirs, graveyards, etc.): According to
121-418: The state, [10] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 20 of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Hidalgo, [11] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Chapter II of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Jalisco, [12] the state classifies its settlements as follows: According to Article 9 of the Organic Municipal Law of the State of Mexico, [13]
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