List of regions of Nunavut
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Canadian territory of Nunavut, made in 1999, has three main regions. These regions help organize government services for the big land. Even though each region does not have its own government, Nunavut’s leaders make sure services are provided based on these areas.
These regions also help collect important information for Statistics Canada during censuses. Before the 2021 census, two of the regions had different names: the Qikiqtaaluk Region was called the Baffin Region, and the Kivalliq Region was known as the Keewatin Region.
It’s important to know that Nunavut’s regions are not exactly the same as the old regions of the Northwest Territories. When Nunavut was made, parts of those old regions became part of Nunavut, with some small changes to their borders. The way Nunavut is divided is also different from an older system used in the Northwest Territories that stopped being used many years ago.
List
Nunavut, a territory in Canada, has three main areas. These areas help organize government services and are also used when counting people.
| Region (census division) | Regional centre | Former NWT region | Population, 2021 (2016) | Population change (2016–2021) | Land area | Population density | Map |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kitikmeot Region ᕿᑎᕐᒥᐅᑦ | Cambridge Bay | Kitikmeot Region | 6,458 (6,543) | -1.3% | 432,108.00 km2 (166,837.83 sq mi) | 0.015/km2 (0.039/sq mi) | |
| Kivalliq Region ᑭᕙᓪᓕᖅ | Rankin Inlet | Keewatin Region | 11,045 (10,413) | +6.1% | 434,331.16 km2 (167,696.20 sq mi) | 0.025/km2 (0.066/sq mi) | |
| Qikiqtaaluk Region ᕿᑭᖅᑖᓗᒃ | Iqaluit | Baffin Region | 19,355 (18,988) | +1.9% | 970,554.61 km2 (374,733.23 sq mi) | 0.020/km2 (0.052/sq mi) |
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This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on List of regions of Nunavut, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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