Administrative Divisions of Eurasia (In Frederick's Fields)

has over 200 administrative divisions with varying levels of government authority, extremely varying populations, economic systems, etc.

Affiliated States
Affiliated States are the first of the administrative divisions of the Eurasian Union. Rather than being created due to a special purpose, they are the remnants of five of the six vassal states of the Russian Empire before the (the sixth,, was released by joint decision of the Russian and German governments as the ).

The Affiliated States are almost independent. Only foreign diplomacy, customs, trade regulations, immigratory policy and interstate infrastructure are managed by the Eurasian government; the states can establish their own constitutions and Parliaments, have their own armies, have different fiscal policies in regards to spending and taxation, and administration of local infrastructure, education, healthcare and trade legislation (although these are required to work by sets of policy arranged by the central Eurasian government). Police forces, social and cultural legislation is also fully devolved and independent from other states. Laws that are not specified by Eurasian law are left up for the Affiliated States to legislate.

Besides Finland, the Affiliated States tend to be far more conservative than the Eurasian average, with right-wing governments in four of them. Political parties, like in the States of the Union, are fully internal, but are affiliated to one of the pan-Eurasian governments. The Affiliated States of the Eurasian Union are as follows:

States of the Union
States of the Union are provincial territories created to accomodate regional minorities with their own regional governments. Besides the Affiliated States, the States of the Union are the most autonomous of the regions of Eurasia, as they have their right to their own constitution and their own legislature elected by suffrage. Modelled after US States, the Eurasian government has a system of dual federalism, with states having control over property, inheritance, interstate commercial, banking, corporate, insurance, family, morality, public health, education, criminal law (to a degree), land use, local government and licensing. They differ from Affiliated States in the fact that their fiscal autonomy is not nearly as extensive (they need to abide by much Eurasian legislation)

(seats decided by the equation s=2987*(x/501), where x is the population of the subject and s the amount of seats)