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The UN geoscheme is a system that divides the world into six continental regions, 22 subregions, and two intermediary regions for statistical convenience. It differs from other regional classifications used by some UN agencies and organizations.
A map of the world divided into six regions according to World Bank analytical grouping and income levels. See the list of countries and territories in each region and their income classification.
Compare how different sources define and group countries into world regions. See interactive maps and download data for six, seven, or eight world regions.
Learn how the UN member states are grouped by geography and how they distribute seats and leadership positions in various UN bodies. See the history, overview and current status of the five regional groups: Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Eastern Europe, Latin America and Caribbean, and Western Europe and Others.
An interactive visualization from Our World in Data.
A list of 248 countries and territories by the United Nations geoscheme, a system of six continental regions, 22 subregions, and two intermediary regions. The list includes UN member states, observer states, free associations, non-sovereign dependencies, disputed territories, and Antarctica.
This web page explains how countries are grouped by geographic regions for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) indicators report. It shows a map of the M49 regions and provides links to...
Learn how the world can be divided into ten geographic regions: Africa, Asia, Central America, Eastern Europe, European Union, Middle East, North America, Oceania, South America, and the Caribbean. See the lists of countries in each region and some facts and quotes about them.
Learn about the different definitions and classifications of world regions by the United Nations, the World Bank, and the CIA World Factbook. See maps and examples of each region and subregion.
Learn how different organizations and institutions divide the world into regions based on various factors, such as geography, culture, history, politics, and economy. Compare and explore maps of the world regions according to the World Bank, WHO, EIU, UN, and SDGs.