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This article is part of the series on
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Urban communities |
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Others in Overseas France
Overseas collectivities |
In France, urban communities (French: communauté urbaine) are the most integrated form of intercommunality in France. An urban community is composed of a commune and its independent suburbs.
The first urban communities were created by the French Parliament on December 31, 1966. Originally there were only four, found in the metropolitan areas of Bordeaux, Lille, Lyon and Strasbourg. Later, others were created in other metropolitan areas. The purpose of the urban communities was to achieve cooperation and joint administration between large cities and their independent suburbs. This step often followed failed attempts to merge the communes within a metropolitan area. The status of the urban communities was modified by the Chevènement Law of 1999.
Unlike agglomeration communities and commune communities, communes cannot leave an urban community freely.
As of January 1, 2007, there are 14 urban communities in France (all in metropolitan France), with a combined 6.25 million inhabitants.[1]
(ranked by population as of March 1999 census, in 2007 limits)
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