Federation of Earth
Source: https://www.ef-gov.org/en/federation-of-earth
Archived: 2026-04-23 17:19
Federation of Earth
Federation of Earth
(limited world federation, organized as a universal federation)
Home
Federation of Earth
Federation of Earth
Bill of Rights
Constitution
Member Nations
World Territories
World Federal Zones
World Capitals
Flag
The World Federation,
Federation of Earth
, is a
limited world federation
. It is organized as a universal federation, to include all nations and all people, and to encompass all oceans, seas and lands of Earth, inclusive of non-self governing territories, together with the surrounding atmosphere.
1
Federation of Earth was established upon the formal claiming of its
world territories
by the
Fifth Provisional World Parliament
through the enactment of the
World Legislative Act #12
in November 2000.
Federation of Earth
(limited world federation)
Governed by the World Government
Member Nations
(~27% of the Earth)
Very Limited Jurisdiction of the World Government
World Federal Zones
(20 Zones)
Exclusive Jurisdiction of the
World Government
World Capitals
(1 Primary + 4 Secondary)
Exclusive Jurisdiction of the
World Government
World Territories
(~73% of the Earth + others)
Exclusive Jurisdiction of the World Government
Territories of the Federation of Earth
Map of the Federation of Earth:
Map of the Federation of Earth
Other Maps:
For thematic maps of Federation of Earth by other subjects, please visit:
Maps of the Federation of Earth by theme
Transitional ISO 3166-1 codes:
ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code: FE
ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code: FOE
ISO 3166-1 numeric code: 900
Top-level domains (TLDs):
ccTLD: .FE
geoTLD: .FoE
sTLD: .GOVT
References:
1.
Section 2.1
of Article 2 of the Constitution for the Federation of Earth (CFoE).
Informational Content:
A
limited world federation
refers to a type of global political structure where sovereign states retain a significant degree of independence and authority, but they come together under a central governing body for specific, agreed-upon purposes. In this system, the central authority of the federation is limited in scope, focusing only on areas where global cooperation is necessary—like trade, security, environmental protection or human rights—while leaving other matters, such as domestic governance, to individual states.
Page Last Updated: 2026-02-17
Federation of Earth
(limited world federation, organized as a universal federation)
Home
Federation of Earth
Federation of Earth
Bill of Rights
Constitution
Member Nations
World Territories
World Federal Zones
World Capitals
Flag
The World Federation,
Federation of Earth
, is a
limited world federation
. It is organized as a universal federation, to include all nations and all people, and to encompass all oceans, seas and lands of Earth, inclusive of non-self governing territories, together with the surrounding atmosphere.
1
Federation of Earth was established upon the formal claiming of its
world territories
by the
Fifth Provisional World Parliament
through the enactment of the
World Legislative Act #12
in November 2000.
Federation of Earth
(limited world federation)
Governed by the World Government
Member Nations
(~27% of the Earth)
Very Limited Jurisdiction of the World Government
World Federal Zones
(20 Zones)
Exclusive Jurisdiction of the
World Government
World Capitals
(1 Primary + 4 Secondary)
Exclusive Jurisdiction of the
World Government
World Territories
(~73% of the Earth + others)
Exclusive Jurisdiction of the World Government
Territories of the Federation of Earth
Map of the Federation of Earth:
Map of the Federation of Earth
Other Maps:
For thematic maps of Federation of Earth by other subjects, please visit:
Maps of the Federation of Earth by theme
Transitional ISO 3166-1 codes:
ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code: FE
ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code: FOE
ISO 3166-1 numeric code: 900
Top-level domains (TLDs):
ccTLD: .FE
geoTLD: .FoE
sTLD: .GOVT
References:
1.
Section 2.1
of Article 2 of the Constitution for the Federation of Earth (CFoE).
Informational Content:
A
limited world federation
refers to a type of global political structure where sovereign states retain a significant degree of independence and authority, but they come together under a central governing body for specific, agreed-upon purposes. In this system, the central authority of the federation is limited in scope, focusing only on areas where global cooperation is necessary—like trade, security, environmental protection or human rights—while leaving other matters, such as domestic governance, to individual states.
Page Last Updated: 2026-02-17