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daïras

Daïras are administrative divisions used in Algeria to organize the territory between the province (wilaya) and the municipality (commune). The term, derived from the Arabic daïra meaning circle or district, is commonly written with the diaeresis: daïra. The concept exists in other Maghrebi contexts, but in Algeria it denotes a clearly defined tier of administration within each wilaya. Each wilaya comprises several daïras, and each daïra contains one or more communes. The number of daïras varies by wilaya.

A daïra has a seat, usually the main town within the district, and is headed by a

Functions include overseeing the implementation of national and local policies at the district level, civil registration

The daïra system reflects Algeria's three-tier territorial organization and remains a standard unit in the country's

chef
de
daïra
who
is
appointed
by
the
central
government
and
reports
to
the
wali
(governor)
of
the
wilaya.
The
chef
de
daïra
supervises
the
district's
civil
administration,
coordinates
public
services
across
the
communes,
and
represents
the
state
at
district
level.
In
practice,
the
daïra
serves
as
an
administrative
and
coordination
layer
that
links
the
communes
with
the
province.
and
documentation,
urban
planning
coordination,
management
of
development
projects,
and
facilitation
of
inter-communal
cooperation.
The
daïra
cabinet
may
organize
meetings
with
commune
representatives
and
monitor
service
delivery
on
behalf
of
the
state.
administrative
geography,
alongside
wilayas
and
communes.
See
also
Administrative
divisions
of
Algeria,
Wilaya,
Commune.