Regions of the Philippines
In the Philippines, regions are administrative divisions that primarily serve to coordinate planning and organize national government services across multiple local government units. Most national government offices provide services through their regional branches instead of having direct provincial or city offices. These regional offices are usually located in the city designated as the regional center.
Currently, the Philippines is divided into 17 regions. Sixteen of these are mere administrative groupings, each provided by the President of the Philippines with a regional development council – in the case of the National Capital Region, an additional metropolitan authority serves as the coordinating and policy-making body. Only one, the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, has an elected government to which the Congress of the Philippines has delegated certain powers and responsibilities.
History
Regions first came to existence on September 24, 1972, when the provinces of the Philippines were organized into eleven regions under Presidential Decree No. 1 as part of the Integrated Reorganization Plan of the former President Ferdinand Marcos.Since that time, other regions have been created and some provinces have been transferred from one region to another.
- June 22, 1973: Pangasinan was transferred from Region III to Region I.
- July 7, 1975: Region XII created and minor reorganization of some Mindanao regions.
- July 25, 1975: Regions IX and XII declared as Autonomous Regions in Western and Central Mindanao respectively.
- August 21, 1975: Region IX divided into Sub-Region IX-A and Sub-Region IX-B. Minor reorganization of some Mindanao regions.
- November 7, 1975: Metropolitan Manila created.
- June 2, 1978: Metropolitan Manila declared as the National Capital Region.
- June 11, 1978: Regional center of Region IX transferred from Jolo, Sulu to Zamboanga City.
- July 15, 1987: Cordillera Administrative Region created.
- August 1, 1989: Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao created. Region XII reverted to an administrative region.
- October 23, 1989: First creation of Cordillera Autonomous Region. Ratification rejected by residents in a plebiscite.
- October 12, 1990: Executive Order 429 issued by President Corazon Aquino to reorganize the Mindanao regions but the reorganization never happened.
- February 23, 1995: Region XIII created and minor reorganization of some Mindanao regions. Sultan Kudarat transferred to Region XI.
- 1997: Minor reorganization of some Mindanao regions.
- December 22, 1997: Second creation of Cordillera Autonomous Region. Ratification rejected by residents in a plebiscite.
- December 18, 1998: Sultan Kudarat returned to Region XII.
- March 31, 2001: ARMM expanded.
- September 19, 2001: Most Mindanao regions reorganized and some renamed.
- May 17, 2002: Region IV-A and Region IV-B created from the former Region IV region. Aurora transferred to Region III.
- May 23, 2005: Palawan transferred from Region IV-B to Region VI; Mimaropa renamed to Mimaro.
- August 19, 2005: Transfer of Palawan to Region VI held in abeyance.
- May 29, 2015: Negros Island Region created. Negros Occidental and Bacolod from Region VI and Negros Oriental from Region VII transferred to form new region.
- July 17, 2016: Republic Act No. 10879 established the Southwestern Tagalog Region from the former Region IV-B.
- August 9, 2017: Executive Order No. 38 was signed by President Rodrigo Duterte abolishing the Negros Island Region.
- January 25, 2019: Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao created replacing the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao after the Republic Act No. 11054 or the Bangsamoro Organic Law was "deemed ratified" on January 25, 2019 following the January 21 plebiscite.
List of regions
Types of regions
Administrative region
An administrative region is a grouping of geographically adjacent LGUs that may be established, disestablished, and modified by the President of the Philippines based on the need to formulate coherent economic development policies, more efficiently provide national government services, and coordinate activities beneficial to the development of larger area beyond the province level. No plebiscites have been conducted so far to democratically confirm the creation, abolition or alteration of the boundaries of regular administrative regions, as the Constitution does not mandate it.An administrative region is not a local government unit, but rather a group of LGUs to which the President has provided an unelected policy-making and coordinating structure, called the Regional Development Council. Metro Manila is recognized in law as a "special development and administrative region", and was thus given the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority ; the Metro Manila Council within the MMDA serves as the National Capital Region's RDC.
Autonomous region
The 1987 Constitution allows for the creation of autonomous regions in the Cordillera Central of Luzon and the Muslim-majority areas of Mindanao. However, only the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao and its predecessor, the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, have been approved by voters in plebiscites held in 1989, 2001, and 2019. Voters in the Cordilleras rejected autonomy in 1990 and 1998; hence the Cordillera Administrative Region remains as a regular administrative region with no delegated powers or responsibilities.The Supreme Court has ruled that an autonomous region established by statute must be composed of more than one province, thereby invalidating the proposed establishment of the Autonomous Region of Ifugao following the results of the original 1990 Cordillera autonomy plebiscite, which saw only Ifugao's voters casting a majority 'yes' vote towards autonomy.
Table of regions
- Component local government units: the data column is limited to primary LGUs, which pertains to component provinces, highly urbanized cities, and independent component cities, as well as the independent municipality of Pateros. All city names, except those under the National Capital Region, are italicized.
- Location: the location map column can be sorted from north-to-south, west-to-east.
Judicial regions
Proposed regions
- Cordillera Autonomous Region
- Samar Administrative Region
- Bicol Autonomous Region, or merge with Samar Administrative Region.
- Bangsasug
Defunct regions
- Southern Tagalog
- Western Mindanao
- Central Mindanao
- Southern Mindanao
- Negros Island Region
- Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao