Districts are a form of local government in several countries.
Districts are the most recognisable form of
local government in large parts of
England. For those areas which retain two-tier
local government, districts usually form the lower tier of that arrangement, with
counties forming the upper tier. Districts tend to have responsibility for a number of areas including:
Each district raises taxes from residents on behalf of itself, and the upper tier authority through the Council Tax. It also raises income from business through the Non-Domestic Rates[?] system, which is co-ordinated nationally.
A
district ("Kreis") is a subdivision of a
Regierungsbezirk, an administrative region (or, in those
states that do not contain administrative regions, of a state). See also:
list of German districts.
A
district ("amphoe") is a subdivision of a
Province ("changwat") in
Thailand. Some provinces also contain sub-districts ("king amphoe"), which are smaller then the average district.
A
district (
gun in
Japanese) is a local administrative unit comprising
towns[?] and
villages[?] but not
cities[?]. See
district (japan) for more complete discription.