Borderless country

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A borderless country may be defined as an island nation, an insular territory over which a nation-state maintains sovereignty under international law, that does not share the land territory of the island with other nation-states which are sovereign under international law. For example, the Republic of Ireland shares the island of Ireland with Northern Ireland and thus is not borderless. Madagascar, on the other hand, is defined as a borderless country because it controls an entire island. In the example of Australia most geographers would argue that one country controls the entire continental mainland of a continent. A borderless nation does not have to be located on a single island, as countries such as the Federated States of Micronesia can consist of thousands of islands. Cuba is a disputed case of an island nation because the United States exercises effective sovereignty over part of Guantanamo Bay.1 Cyprus 4 is no longer a disputed case, as the British Akrotiri and Dhekelia Sovereign Base Areas are now accorded full status by nearly all relevant authorities as full-fledged sovereign British dependencies.

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