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  2. List of micronations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_micronations

    The micronation counted all gay and lesbian people worldwide as permanent residents and eligible for citizenship. In 2017, the Australian government agreed to legalize same-sex marriage if a majority of voters responding to an official survey supported it. The results were in favour of legalization.

  3. Micronations: The Lonely Planet Guide to Home-Made Nations

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micronations:_The_Lonely...

    It was written by John Ryan, George Dunford and Simon Sellars. Self-described as a humorous guidebook and written in a light-hearted tone, the book's profile of micronations offers information on their flags, leaders, currencies, maps and other facts. It was re-subtitled Guide to Self-Proclaimed Nations in later publications.

  4. MicroWiki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MicroWiki

    [4] [10] In the Cambridge University Press book Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty, MicroWiki is mentioned several times as an online community for online micronations. [11] In late 2024, a group of MicroWiki users strongly criticised the wiki's practices and biased administrators, which made strong waves in the micronational community ...

  5. Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micronations_and_the...

    Micronations are political entities that claim independence and mimic acts of sovereignty as if they were a sovereign state, but lack any legal recognition. [2] According to Collins English Dictionary, many exist "only on the internet or within the private property of [their] members" [3] and seek to simulate a state rather than to achieve international recognition; their activities are ...

  6. Micronation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micronation

    Micronations are aspirant states that claim independence but lack legal recognition by world governments or major international organisations. [5] [6] Micronations are classified separately from states with limited recognition and quasi-states, nor are they considered to be autonomous or self-governing as they lack the legal basis in international law for their existence. [7]

  7. Mini-dokuritsukoku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mini-dokuritsukoku

    The story was in turn inspired by the micronation of New Atlantis. [5] The following micronation boom, fuelled by copy cat behaviour from businesses such as ryokan and minshuku, reached its peak at 1983 before seeing the numbers of new micronations decline. [6] [3] By 1988, approximately 150 micronations had been established. [7]

  8. Wikipedia:WikiProject Micronations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    The micronation promotes direct democracy and the micro-nationalism movement. Their coat of arms contains the symbol of the eye of providence, and there are many references to Masonic terminology in the text of the constitution. [10] None of the citizens live on the island and the country is not recognized by any country in the world.

  9. Wikipedia:Micronations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Micronations

    "micronation" as a catch-all term has been applied by the media, by major public institutions, in educational discourse and in printed publications to describe any and all of the above for well over a decade. Wikipedia is not the arbiter of whether the concept of micronations is "trivial" or not. The concept exists and has been clearly defined.