Eurasia (In Frederick's Fields)

The Eurasian Union (Russian: Евразийский Союз, Evrazijskij Soyuz), shortened to Eurasia, is a confederal monarchy located in north Eurasia. The Eurasian Union is the largest state in the world, as well as one of the most populated and wealthy ones. Eurasia has land borders with the most nations in Earth, including Norway, Sweden, Germany, Poland, Romania, Turkey, Assyria, Mazandaran, Afghanistan, Kashmir and China. Eurasia spans many different time zones, and is a monumentally large nation.

Eurasia has a loosely bound union of quasi-independent states, that act with differing levels of autonomy in economic, political, cultural and sometimes even military issues. The Eurasian states have, in several cases, different rules and constitutions of their own, as well as powerful devolved parliaments. Eurasia also goes an extra mile to protect the titular nationality of each province, granting wide benefits to natives and promotion of local cultures over general Russian. This controversial policy has had wide success, with, for example, native Saami speakers outnumbering Russians about 60% to 40%, even though they were outnumbered almost 5 to 1 in 1920. However, it is heavily controversial.

Economically, the Eurasian Union is the largest economy on earth, but, despite its high human development index and GDP per capita, high levels of inequality exist. This leads to huge numbers of social problems, such as gang violence, crippling alcoholism and divided families. It is estimated one in 5 children in Eurasia has been adopted (mostly by a native family, if not in a Russian state). This leads to the existance of large-scale social movements to "Save the nation!", as the most common slogan pleads. However, the EU has successfully enrichened many, if not most of its citizens, in periods of well-being, and save them from extreme stress in periods of recession.

History
The Eurasian Federation was born in 1920 after the end of the Great War, in which a combination of student protests, previously passed legislature, and the liberal-socialist government of the Party of Nations and the Trudoviks (allied with the KDs and some Decembrists) led to the reform of the Russian Empire into Eurasia.

Administrative Divisions
The Eurasian Union has several different layers of autonomy, that spread from "Affiliated States" to simple provinces, or oblasts, to cities and territories directly managed by the central government. The administrative divisions aren't standardised; there are several types of divisions, which are, in order of autonomy given to them:
 * 1) The Affiliated States: Almost independent, they are part of the Eurasian Union in terms of foreign diplomacy, customs, trade regulations, immigratory policy and others, but has full autonomy in regards to fiscal policy, social and political reform, economic development, investment, and military. The Affiliated States have their own devolved Parliaments, have, in some cases, international recognition and act, all in all, as independent states that are affiliated to Eurasia. The Affiliated States are:
 * 2) The ,
 * 3) The ,
 * 4) The ,
 * 5) The, and
 * 6) The.
 * 7) The States of the Union are the most common form of administrative division in non-ethnic Russian lands. The States are generally considered those nations with a population of over 300,000 with a titular majority, and are composed of some of the largest divisions of Eurasia. The States have partial financial autonomy, have their own devolved Parliaments which convene in its own regional and national assemblies, and have full cultural and social autonomy. The States of the Union are: