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Small state
Small state is a generic term for a small country, that has limited land, population, or resources. The term "small state" is similar to the term microstate or ministate, a sovereign state having a very small population or land area, usually both. However, the meanings of "state" and "very small" are not well-defined in international law. Two important definitions for a small state are World Bank, which defines small state as those with less than 1.5 million people, which is about 40-50 countries, and the U.N. Forum on Small States which has higher threshold and includes about 100 countries, most of which are under 5 million people.
The term small state is a usually inclusive to microstates; while microstates can be considered small states, not all small states are microstates. There is different criteria for defining small states. A small state may be considered a small power if they are able to project political power regionally.
Metrics for defining a small state look at aspects of country including area, population, size of the government, territory, and political situation. One of the most common metrics to look at is population, which constraints other aspects, and countries with less than one million people is one common benchmark. However some institutions have used different standards, such as 1.5 million or higher, and especially if the states define themselves and want to be defined that way. Two important listings of small states are the World Bank and the Forum on Small states, which includes about 51 and over 100 nations respectively.
Two thirds of U.N. members can be considered small states by some definitions, while World Bank made a list which is about 50 countries globally. World Bank uses a threshold of 1.5 million population or less to describe a small state, which is about 40 nations, and there is another dozen close to 1.5 million but have similar issues as the other small states.
World Bank lists the following countries as small states using their definition:
If a threshold of 1.5 million people was chosen, at one time this included about 30 countries.
The point at which a small state becomes a microstate, has been defined in research as being as low as 100 thousand people but up to 1.5 million, though one million is most common.
The Commonwealth Secretariat defines 42 countries in the world to be small states, and further notes of these 33 of them are part of the Commonwealth of Nations. The Secretariat was founded in the 1980s to advocate for small states, noting their increased vulnerability.
Hub AI
Small state AI simulator
(@Small state_simulator)
Small state
Small state is a generic term for a small country, that has limited land, population, or resources. The term "small state" is similar to the term microstate or ministate, a sovereign state having a very small population or land area, usually both. However, the meanings of "state" and "very small" are not well-defined in international law. Two important definitions for a small state are World Bank, which defines small state as those with less than 1.5 million people, which is about 40-50 countries, and the U.N. Forum on Small States which has higher threshold and includes about 100 countries, most of which are under 5 million people.
The term small state is a usually inclusive to microstates; while microstates can be considered small states, not all small states are microstates. There is different criteria for defining small states. A small state may be considered a small power if they are able to project political power regionally.
Metrics for defining a small state look at aspects of country including area, population, size of the government, territory, and political situation. One of the most common metrics to look at is population, which constraints other aspects, and countries with less than one million people is one common benchmark. However some institutions have used different standards, such as 1.5 million or higher, and especially if the states define themselves and want to be defined that way. Two important listings of small states are the World Bank and the Forum on Small states, which includes about 51 and over 100 nations respectively.
Two thirds of U.N. members can be considered small states by some definitions, while World Bank made a list which is about 50 countries globally. World Bank uses a threshold of 1.5 million population or less to describe a small state, which is about 40 nations, and there is another dozen close to 1.5 million but have similar issues as the other small states.
World Bank lists the following countries as small states using their definition:
If a threshold of 1.5 million people was chosen, at one time this included about 30 countries.
The point at which a small state becomes a microstate, has been defined in research as being as low as 100 thousand people but up to 1.5 million, though one million is most common.
The Commonwealth Secretariat defines 42 countries in the world to be small states, and further notes of these 33 of them are part of the Commonwealth of Nations. The Secretariat was founded in the 1980s to advocate for small states, noting their increased vulnerability.