Administrative divisions of Magisteria

Magisteria is divided into four levels of administrative divisions: The first and highest level are the 35 states, the federal district, and the five autonomous republics, the second level are the 92 federal provinces dividing all 35 states, the third level are the local-level government areas, and the fourth and lowest level are the urban districts. The states, the federal district, and the five autonomous republics have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.

Political organization
Magisteria is a federation of 41 main federal entities (35 states, a federal district, and five autonomous republics). States are divided for administration purposes into federal provinces and local-level government areas, except for the Philadelphia state, which is divided into regencies and minor regencies.

States and the five autonomous republics hold all the power that they chose not to delegate to the federal government; they must be representative commonwealths and must not contradict the Constitution. Beyond this, they are fully autonomous: they enact their own constitutions, freely organize their local governments, and own and manage their natural and financial resources. Thus, each province has its own set of provincial laws and justice system, a supreme court, a governor, an autonomous police force, and a congress; in seventeen states and in the Charente Autonomous Republic, the legislatures are bicameral comprising an upper chamber (the Senate) and a lower chamber (the House of Deputies), while in the remaining eighteen provinces, in the Federal Capital Territory, and in the remaining four autonomous republics (Émilienne, Seine, Caietanus, Horsfall), it is unicameral.

In case of sedition, insurrection, territorial invasion, or any other emergent against the laws of the Nation on any province or the federal capital, the National Parliament has the authority to declare a federal intervention on the compromised district, even in the absence of a formal request by the affected part. When the Parliament is in recess and thus unable to decide, the President is entitled to decree such intervention, but this executive order is subject to parliamentary override upon the Parliament's immediate reassembly. Once the intervention is declared the compromised district's government is immediately dissolved—in whole or in part depending on the parliamentary decision—and the President appoints a representative or intervenor, who will serve for a short time until the emergency is solved.