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The 2007 edition of "Doing Business," prepared by the World Bank's private sector development department, has declared the Marshall Islands to be the world's "Best Performer" for its ease and low expense in hiring and firing employees. By the same token, the same study gave the Marshall Islands extremely low ratings for its protection of investors and contract enforcement.
The 2007 edition of "Doing Business," prepared by the World Bank's private sector development department, has declared the Marshall Islands to be the world's "Best Performer" for its ease and low expense in hiring and firing employees. By the same token, the same study gave the Marshall Islands extremely low ratings for its protection of investors and contract enforcement.

Many students studying the Marshall Islands plagerize this section in an attempt to avoid actual research. I would ask that this paragraph be left in until Wednesday December 4th, 2007 when I will delete it myself.


Not being among the 179 member countries of the [[International Labour Organization|ILO]], the Marshall Islands is among the handful of countries not obliged to abide by the core labour standards (elimination of forced labour, child labour and discrimination, and respect for freedom of association and right to collective bargaining) as required of ILO members.
Not being among the 179 member countries of the [[International Labour Organization|ILO]], the Marshall Islands is among the handful of countries not obliged to abide by the core labour standards (elimination of forced labour, child labour and discrimination, and respect for freedom of association and right to collective bargaining) as required of ILO members.

Revision as of 10:15, 3 December 2007

Aolepān Aorōkin M̧ajeļ
Republic of the Marshall Islands
Motto: "Jepilpilin ke ejukaan" ("Accomplishment through Joint Effort")
Anthem: Forever Marshall Islands
Location of Marshall Islands
Capital
and largest city
Majuro
Official languagesMarshallese, English
Demonym(s)Marshallese
Government
• President
Kessai H. Note
Independence
• from the United States
October 21 1986
Area
• Total
181 km2 (70 sq mi) (213th)
• Water (%)
negligible
Population
• July 2005 estimate
61,963 (205th)
• 2003 census
56,429
• Density
326/km2 (844.3/sq mi) (28th)
GDP (PPP)2001 estimate
• Total
$115 million (220th)
• Per capita
$2,900 (2005 est.) (195th)
HDI (n/a)n/a
Error: Invalid HDI value (n/a)
CurrencyUnited States dollar (USD)
Time zoneUTC+12
Calling code692
ISO 3166 codeMH
Internet TLD.mh

The Marshall Islands, officially the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), is a Micronesian island nation in the western Pacific Ocean, located north of Nauru and Kiribati, east of the Federated States of Micronesia and south of the U.S. territory of Wake Island, to which it lays claim.

History

Although they were settled by Micronesians in the 2nd millennium BC, little is known of the early history of the islands. Spanish explorer Alonso de Salazar was the first European to sight the Marshall Islands in 1526, but the islands remained virtually unvisited by Europeans for several more centuries, before the arrival of British Captain John Marshall in 1788; the islands owe their name to him.

Map of the Marshall Islands
Mushroom cloud from the largest nuclear test the United States ever conducted, Castle Bravo.

A German trading company settled on the islands in 1885, and they became part of the protectorate of German New Guinea some years later. Japan conquered the islands in World War I, and administered them as a League of Nations mandate.

In World War II, the United States occupied the islands (1944), and they were added to the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (including several more island groups in the South Sea). Between 1946 and 1958 the United States tested 66 nuclear weapons in the Marshall Islands,[1] including the largest nuclear test the United States ever conducted, Castle Bravo. Nuclear claims between the United States and the Marshall Islands are ongoing, and health effects still linger from these tests. (See Rongelap.)

In 1979 the Government of the Marshall Islands was officially established and the country became self-governing. In 1986 the Compact of Free Association with the United States entered into force, granting the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) its sovereignty. The Compact provided for aid and U.S. defense of the islands in exchange for continued U.S. military use of the missile testing range at Kwajalein Atoll. The independence was formally completed under international law in 1990, when the UN officially ended the Trusteeship status.

On March 21 2007, the government of the Marshall Islands declared a state of emergency after water ran out amid a prolonged drought.

Government

The government of the Marshall Islands operates under a mixed parliamentary-presidential system. Elections are held every four years in universal suffrage (for all citizens above 18 years of age) with each of the twenty-four constituencies (see below) electing one or more representatives (senators) to the lower house of RMI’s bicameral legislature, the Nitijela. (Majuro, the capital atoll, elects five senators.) The President, who is head of state as well as head of government, is elected in his turn by the 33 senators of the Nitijela.

Legislative power lies with the Nitijela. The upper house of Parliament, called the Council of Iroij, is an advisory body comprising twelve tribal chiefs.

The executive branch consists of the President and the Presidential Cabinet (ten ministers appointed by the President with the approval of the Nitijela.)

The twenty-four electoral districts into which the country is divided correspond to the inhabited islands and atolls: