User:Feroang/sandbox

probando

Olympic Games host cities

(started July 2012)

Olympic Games host cities[1]
YearSummer Olympic GamesWinter Olympic GamesYouth Olympic Games
OlympiadHost cityNo.Host cityNo.Host City
1896I Athens, Greece
1900II Paris, France
1904III St. Louis, United States[a]
1906Intercalated[b] Athens, Greece
1908IV London, Great Britain
1912V Stockholm, Sweden
1916VI Berlin, Germany
Cancelled because of World War I
1920VII Antwerp, Belgium
1924VIII Paris, FranceI Chamonix, France
1928IX Amsterdam, NetherlandsII St. Moritz, Switzerland
1932X Los Angeles, United StatesIII Lake Placid, United States
1936XI Berlin, GermanyIV Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
1940XII Tokyo, Japan
Helsinki, Finland
Cancelled because of World War II
V Sapporo, Japan
St. Moritz, Switzerland
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
Cancelled because of World War II
1944XIII London, Great Britain
Cancelled because of World War II
V Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy
Cancelled because of World War II
1948XIV London, Great BritainV St. Moritz, Switzerland
1952XV Helsinki, FinlandVI Oslo, Norway
1956XVI Melbourne, Australia +
Stockholm, Sweden[c][2]
VII Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy
1960XVII Rome, ItalyVIII Squaw Valley, United States
1964XVIII Tokyo, JapanIX Innsbruck, Austria
1968XIX Mexico City, MexicoX Grenoble, France
1972XX Munich, West GermanyXI Sapporo, Japan
1976XXI Montreal, CanadaXII Denver, United States
Innsbruck, Austria
1980XXII Moscow, Soviet UnionXIII Lake Placid, United States
1984XXIII Los Angeles, United StatesXIV Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
1988XXIV Seoul, South KoreaXV Calgary, Canada
1992XXV Barcelona, SpainXVI Albertville, France
1994XVII Lillehammer, Norway
1996XXVI Atlanta, United States
1998XVIII Nagano, Nagano, Japan
2000XXVII Sydney, Australia
2002XIX Salt Lake City, United States
2004XXVIII Athens, Greece
2006XX Turin, Italy
2008XXIX Beijing, China[d][3]
2010XXI Vancouver, CanadaI (Summer)  Singapore
2012XXX London, Great BritainI (Winter) Innsbruck, Austria
2014XXII Sochi, RussiaII (Summer) Nanjing, China
2016XXXI Rio de Janeiro, BrazilII (Winter) Lillehammer, Norway
2018XXIII Pyeongchang, South KoreaIII (Summer) Medellin, Colombia
2020XXXII Istambul, TurkeyIII (Winter) Lake Placid, United States
2022XXIV Munich, GermanyIV (Summer) Delhi, India
2024XXXIII Guadalajara, MexicoIV (Winter) Santiago, Chile
2026XXV Changchun, ChinaV (Summer) Johannesburg, South Africa
2028XXXIV Tokyo, JapanV (Winter) Bariloche, Argentina
2030XXVI Denver, United StatesVI (Summer) Cairo, Egipt
2032XXXV Delhi, IndiaVI (Winter)To be determined
2034XXVIITo be determinedVII (Summer)To be determined
2036XXXVI Johannesburg, South AfricaVII (Winter)To be determined

Women

YearHostFinal3rd place match
ChampionsScoreRunners-up3rd placeScore4th place
1991
Details

São Paulo

Sadia E. C. São Paulo

Colgate São Caetano

Mladost Zagreb
1992
Details

Jesi

Messaggero Ravenna

L'acqua di Fiori Minas

Uralochka Ekaterimburg
1994
Details

São Paulo

Leite Moça Sorocaba

Parmalat Matera

BCN Guarujá
2010
Details

Doha

Fenerbahçe Acıbadem

Sollys Osasco

Volley Bergamo
2011
Details

Doha

otra cosa

Category:Association football navigational boxes


Top leagues

Argentine Primera Division top scorersArgentine Primera Division top scorers


Baseball World Cup

YearFinal HostFinal fourNumber of teams
ChampionsRunners-up3rd place4th place
1938
Details

England

Great Britain

United States
2
1939
Details

Havana

Cuba

Nicaragua

United States
3
2009
Details

Nettuno

United States

Cuba

Canada

Puerto Rico
22

Results

YearHostWinnersScoreRunners-upThird PlaceScoreFourth PlaceNumber of teams
1930
Details
 Uruguay
Uruguay
4–2
Argentina

United States
[note 1]
Yugoslavia
13
1934
Details
 Italy
Italy
2–1
(a.e.t.)

Czechoslovakia

Germany
3–2
Austria
16
1938
Details
 France
Italy
4–2
Hungary

Brazil
4–2
Sweden
16
1950
Details
 Brazil
Uruguay
[note 2]
Brazil

Sweden
[note 2]
Spain
16
1954
Details
  Switzerland
West Germany
3–2
Hungary

Austria
3–1
Uruguay
16
1958
Details
 Sweden
Brazil
5–2
Sweden

France
6–3
West Germany
16
1962
Details
 Chile
Brazil
3–1
Czechoslovakia

Chile
1–0
Yugoslavia
16
1966
Details
 England
England
4–2
(a.e.t.)

West Germany

Portugal
2–1
Soviet Union
16
1970
Details
 Mexico
Brazil
4–1
Italy

West Germany
1–0
Uruguay
16
1974
Details
 West Germany
West Germany
2–1
Netherlands

Poland
1–0
Brazil
16
1978
Details
 Argentina
Argentina
3–1
(a.e.t.)

Netherlands

Brazil
2–1
Italy
16
1982
Details
 Spain
Italy
3–1
West Germany

Poland
3–2
France
24
1986
Details
 Mexico
Argentina
3–2
West Germany

France
4–2
(a.e.t.)

Belgium
24
1990
Details
 Italy
West Germany
1–0
Argentina

Italy
2–1
England
24
1994
Details
 United States
Brazil
0–0
(a.e.t.)
(3–2 pen.)

Italy

Sweden
4–0
Bulgaria
24
1998
Details
 France
France
3–0
Brazil

Croatia
2–1
Netherlands
32
2002
Details
 South Korea
&  Japan

Brazil
2–0
Germany

Turkey
3–2
South Korea
32
2006
Details
 Germany
Italy
1–1
(a.e.t.)
(5–3 pen.)

France

Germany
3–1
Portugal
32
2010
Details
 South Africa
Spain
1–0
(a.e.t.)

Netherlands

Germany
3–2
Uruguay
32
  • a.e.t.: after extra time
  • pen.: score in penalty shootout
Notes

In all, 76 nations have played in at least one World Cup.[7] Of these, eight national teams have won the World Cup, and they have added stars to their crests, with each star representing a World Cup victory. (However, Uruguay are an exception to this unwritten rule; they choose to display four stars on their crest, representing their two gold medals at the 1924 and 1928 Summer Olympics and their two World Cup titles in 1930 and 1950).

With five titles, Brazil are the most successful World Cup team and also the only nation to have played in every World Cup (19) to date,[8] and they will host the 20th in 2014. Italy (1934 and 1938) and Brazil (1958 and 1962) are the only nations to have won consecutive titles. West Germany (1982–1990) and Brazil (1994–2002) are the only nations to appear in three consecutive World Cup finals. Germany have made the most top-four finishes, with twelve, while sharing the record of most top-two finishes with Brazil, with seven.

Top 20 Leagues in total attendance in 2020

LeagueSportCountrySeason# of TeamsGamesAverage
attendance
Total attendanceSource(s)
Major League BaseballBaseball  United States /  Canada2020302,42030,35273,451,522[9][10]
Nippon Professional BaseballBaseball  Japan20201284625,62621,679,596[11]
NBABasketball  United States /  Canada2019-20301,23017,31921,302,573[12]
NHLIce hockey  United States /  Canada2019-20301,22217,12620,928,036[13][14]
NFLAmerican football  United States20203225666,96017,141,859[15][16][17]
BundesligaAssociation football  Germany2019–202038042,67316,215,740[18]
Premier LeagueAssociation football  England2019–202038035,28313,407,540[19]
La LigaAssociation football  Spain2019–202038029,12811,039,808
Primera División de MéxicoAssociation football  Mexico2019-202040225,83710,386,474[20]
Football League ChampionshipAssociation football  England /  Wales2019–202455217,3889,598,336[21]
Serie AAssociation football  Italy2019–202038024,0319,131,780
Primera División ArgentinaAssociation football  Argentina2019–202038019,8437,854,600[22][23]
MLSAssociation football  United States /  Canada20202441918,0617,567,140[24]
Ligue 1Association football  France2019–202038019,7427,501,953[25]
Australian Football LeagueAustralian Rules football  Australia20201719636,4287,139,854[26]
Korea Professional BaseballBaseball  South Korea2020853212,8016,809,965[27]
Chinese Super LeagueAssociation football  China20202038017,6516,707,380[28] 1
Campeonato Brasileiro Série AAssociation football  Brazil20202038015,9766,070,880[29]
J. League 1Association football  Japan20201830615,7974,833,782[30]
Kontinental Hockey LeagueIce hockey  Russia (25 teams);  Belarus (1 team);  Kazakhstan (1 team);  Latvia (1 team)2019–20287566,1644,659,984[31]
[32]

International matches

TournamentSportRegionYearGamesTotal attendanceAverage attendanceSource
Six Nations ChampionshipRugby unionEurope2020151,034,92668,9952012 Six Nations Championship
FIFA World CupAssociation FootballWorldwide2018643,178,85649,6702010 FIFA World Cup
Boxing Day TestCricketAustralia, England20111 (4 Days)189,34747,3372010–11 Ashes series
Euro 2012Association footballEurope2012311,440,89646,481UEFA Euro 2012 statistics UEFA Euro 2012 Official Site
The Rugby ChampionshipRugby unionSANZAR201212547,52345,627References in 2012 main article
CONCACAF Gold CupAssociation footballNorth America2011251,140,60245,6242011 CONCACAF Gold Cup
Copa AméricaAssociation footballSouth America2019261,050,23040,3932007 Copa América
FIFA Confederations CupAssociation FootballWorldwide200916584,89436,5562009 FIFA Confederations Cup
Rugby World CupRugby unionWorldwide2011481,477,29430,7772011 Rugby World Cup
ANZAC TestRugby leagueAustralia, New Zealand2010129,44229,442[33]
FIFA Women's World Cup finalsAssociation footballWorldwide2019521,062,25620,428Individual match reports at FIFA.comgroup stage and knockout stage
FIFA U-20 World CupAssociation footballWorldwide2011521,309,92925,1912011 FIFA U-20 World Cup
Africa Cup of NationsAssociation footballAfrica201932729,00022,7812013 Africa Cup of Nations
AFC Asian CupAssociation footballAsia200732724,22222,6322007 AFC Asian Cup
World Baseball Classic 1BaseballWorldwide200939801,40820,549[34]
Rugby League Four NationsRugby leagueWorldwide20117128,06518,2952011 Rugby League Four Nations
Rugby League World CupRugby leagueWorldwide200818293,96516,3312008 Rugby League World Cup
World Cup of Hockey 1Ice hockeyWorldwide200419303,63015,9812004 World Cup of Hockey (match stats)
IIHF World U20 ChampionshipIce hockeyWorldwide201231455,34214,6882012 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships
Cricket World CupCricketWorldwide200751672,00013,1762007 Cricket World Cup
FIBA Basketball World CupBasketballWorldwide201080628,29329,666Individual game reports from FIBA.com
Ice Hockey World ChampionshipsIce hockeyWorldwide201156406,8047,2642011 IIHF World Championship
European CupRugby leagueEurope2010636,3766,0632010 European Cup
FIFA Futsal World CupFutsalWorldwide200856292,1615,2172008 FIFA Futsal World Cup
  • 1The World Baseball Classic and World Cup of Hockey are hosted in different regions of the world to boost attendance, as opposed to being hosted in one region like other international tournaments.
  • 2Attendances for Group A in the 2010 FIBA World Championship are not available, this figure is derived from games where attendances are recorded. An arena may host as much as four games per day, and patrons pay for all games.

Infobox country

United States of America
Motto: In God We Trust  (official)
[E Pluribus Unum] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)  (traditional)
(Latin: Out of Many, One)
Anthem: 
"The Star-Spangled Banner"
CapitalWashington, D.C.
38°53′N 77°01′W / 38.883°N 77.017°W / 38.883; -77.017
Largest cityNew York City
Official languagesNone at federal level[a]
National languageEnglish (de facto)[b]
Demonym(s)American
GovernmentFederal presidential constitutional republic
• President
Barack Obama (D)
Joe Biden (D)
John Boehner (R)
John Roberts
LegislatureCongress
Senate
House of Representatives
Independence 
• Declared
July 4, 1776
September 3, 1783
June 21, 1788
Area
• Total
9,826,675 km2 (3,794,100 sq mi)[35][c] (3rd/4th)
• Water (%)
6.76
Population
• 2012 estimate
336,369,000[36] (3rd)
• Density
33.7/km2 (87.3/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2011 estimate
• Total
$15.065 trillion[37] (1st)
• Per capita
$48,147[37] (8th)
GDP (nominal)2011 estimate
• Total
$15.065 trillion[38] (1st)
• Per capita
$48,147[37] (15th)
Gini (2007)45.0[35]
Error: Invalid Gini value (39th)
HDI (2011) 0.910[39]
Error: Invalid HDI value (4th)
CurrencyUnited States dollar ($) (USD)
Time zoneUTC−5 to −10
• Summer (DST)
UTC−4 to −10
Date formatm/d/yy (AD)
Driving sideright
Calling code+1
ISO 3166 codeUS
Internet TLD.us .gov .mil .edu
^ a. English is the official language of at least 28 states—some sources give a higher figure, based on differing definitions of "official".[40] English and Hawaiian are both official languages in the state of Hawaii.

^ b. English is the de facto language of American government and the sole language spoken at home by 80% of Americans age five and older. Spanish is the second most commonly spoken language.

^ c. Whether the United States or the People's Republic of China is larger is disputed. The figure given is from the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency's World Factbook. Other sources give smaller figures. All authoritative calculations of the country's size include only the 50 states and the District of Columbia, not the territories.

^ d. The population estimate includes people whose usual residence is in the fifty states and the District of Columbia, including noncitizens. It does not include either those living in the territories, amounting to more than 4 million U.S. citizens (most in Puerto Rico), or U.S. citizens living outside the United States.

template heads of state

  re-elected o elected during 2 or more consecutives terms

Bachellet

Michelle Bachelet
9th Secretary-General of the United Nations
In office
January 1, 2017 – January 1, 2021
DeputyAsha-Rose Migiro
Preceded byBan Ki-moon
Succeeded byYulia Tymoshenko
President of Chile
In office
1 January 2014 – 13 December 2016
Vice PresidentMarco Enríquez-Ominami
Preceded bySebastián Piñera
Succeeded byMarco Enríquez-Ominami
1st Executive Director of UN Women
In office
14 September 2010 – 1 February 2013
Preceded byInaugural
Succeeded byYulia Tymoshenko
President of Chile
In office
11 March 2006 – 11 March 2010
Preceded byRicardo Lagos
Succeeded bySebastián Piñera
Minister of National Defense
In office
7 January 2002 – 1 October 2004
Preceded byMario Fernández
Succeeded byJaime Ravinet
Minister of Health
In office
11 March 2000 – 7 January 2002
Preceded byÁlex Figueroa
Succeeded byOsvaldo Artaza
President pro tempore of the Union of South American Nations
In office
23 May 2008 – 10 August 2009
Preceded byInaugural
Succeeded byRafael Correa
Personal details
Born (1951-09-29) 29 September 1951 (age 72)
Santiago, Chile
Political partySocialist Party
Alma materUniversity of Chile
ProfessionPaediatric epidemiologist
Signature

List of members of the United Nations Security Council

2016-2020

YearAfrican Group
* indicates Arab nations' representative
Asia-Pacific Group
* indicates Arab nations' representative
Latin American & Caribbean GroupWestern European and Others GroupEastern European Group
1966  Mali  Nigeria  Uganda  Japan  Jordan *  Argentina  Uruguay  Netherlands  New Zealand  Bulgaria
1967  Ethiopia  India  Brazil  Canada  Denmark
1968  Algeria *  Senegal  Pakistan  Paraguay  Hungary
1969  Zambia    Nepal  Colombia  Finland  Spain
1970  Burundi  Sierra Leone  Syria *  Nicaragua  Poland
1971  Somalia  Japan  Argentina  Belgium  Italy
1972  Guinea  Sudan *  India  Panama  Yugoslavia
1973  Kenya  Indonesia  Peru  Australia  Austria
1974  Cameroon  Mauritania  Iraq *  Costa Rica  Byelorussian SSR
1975  Tanzania  Japan  Guyana  Italy  Sweden
1976  Benin  Libya *  Pakistan  Panama  Romania
1977  Mauritius  India  Venezuela  Canada  West Germany
1978  Gabon  Nigeria  Kuwait *  Bolivia  Czechoslovakia
1979  Zambia  Bangladesh  Jamaica  Norway  Portugal
1980  Niger  Tunisia *  Philippines  Mexico  East Germany
1981  Uganda  Japan  Panama  Ireland  Spain
1982  Togo  Zaire  Jordan *  Guyana  Poland
1983  Zimbabwe  Pakistan  Nicaragua  Malta  Netherlands
1984  Burkina Faso[42]  Egypt *  India  Peru  Ukrainian SSR
1985  Madagascar  Thailand  Trinidad and Tobago  Australia  Denmark
1986  Congo  Ghana  United Arab Emirates *  Venezuela  Bulgaria
1987  Zambia  Japan  Argentina  West Germany  Italy
1988  Algeria *  Senegal    Nepal  Brazil  Yugoslavia
1989  Ethiopia  Malaysia  Colombia  Canada  Finland
1990  Côte d'Ivoire  Zaire  Yemen *[43]  Cuba  Romania
1991  Zimbabwe  India  Ecuador  Austria  Belgium
1992  Cape Verde  Morocco *  Japan  Venezuela  Hungary
1993  Djibouti  Pakistan  Brazil  New Zealand  Spain
1994  Nigeria  Rwanda  Oman *  Argentina  Czech Republic
1995  Botswana  Indonesia  Honduras  Germany  Italy
1996  Egypt *  Guinea-Bissau  South Korea  Chile  Poland
1997  Kenya  Japan  Costa Rica  Portugal  Sweden
1998  Gabon  Gambia  Bahrain *  Brazil  Slovenia
1999  Namibia  Malaysia  Argentina  Canada  Netherlands
2000  Mali  Tunisia *  Bangladesh  Jamaica  Ukraine
2001  Mauritius  Singapore  Colombia  Ireland  Norway
2002  Cameroon  Guinea  Syria *  Mexico  Bulgaria
2003  Angola  Pakistan  Chile  Germany  Spain
2004  Algeria *  Benin  Philippines  Brazil  Romania
2005  Tanzania  Japan  Argentina  Denmark  Greece
2006  Ghana  Congo  Qatar *  Peru  Slovakia
2007  South Africa  Indonesia  Panama  Belgium  Italy
2008  Burkina Faso  Libya *  Vietnam  Costa Rica  Croatia
2009  Uganda  Japan  Mexico  Austria  Turkey
2010  Gabon  Nigeria  Lebanon *  Brazil  Bosnia and Herzegovina
2011  South Africa  India  Colombia  Germany  Portugal
2012  Togo  Morocco *  Pakistan  Guatemala  Azerbaijan

Forbes Magazine's List of The World's Most Powerful People

Starting in 2009, Forbes Magazine compiles an annual list of the world's most powerful people. The list has one slot for every 100 million people on Earth, meaning in 2009 there were 67 people on the list, in 2010 there were 68, and in 2011 there were 70. Slots are allocated based on the financial resources and individual controls as well as their influence on world events.[44]


my 2012 list (top 10)[45]

#IndividualOffice / Position
1 Barack Obama44th President of the United States
2 Vladimir PutinPrime Minister of Russia
3 Hu JintaoPresident of the People's Republic of China
4 Angela MerkelChancellor of Germany
5 Bill GatesCo-Chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, founder and chairman of Microsoft
6 Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al Saud6th King of Saudi Arabia and Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
7 Benedict XVI265th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church
8 Ben Bernanke14th Chairman of the Federal Reserve
9 Mark ZuckerbergChief executive officer and founder of Facebook
10 David CameronPrime Minister of the United Kingdom

2011 list (top 10)[45]

#IndividualOffice / Position
1 Barack Obama44th President of the United States
2 Vladimir PutinPrime Minister of Russia
3 Hu JintaoPresident of the People's Republic of China
4 Angela MerkelChancellor of Germany
5 Bill GatesCo-Chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, founder and chairman of Microsoft
6 Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al Saud6th King of Saudi Arabia and Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
7 Benedict XVI265th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church
8 Ben Bernanke14th Chairman of the Federal Reserve
9 Mark ZuckerbergChief executive officer and founder of Facebook
10 David CameronPrime Minister of the United Kingdom

Argenguay at the Olympics

Ukraine at the
Olympics
IOC codeUKR
NOCNational Olympic Committee of Ukraine
Websitewww.noc-ukr.org (in Ukrainian and English)
Medals
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
0
Total
0
Summer appearances
Winter appearances
Other related appearances
 Austria (1896–1912)
 Hungary (1896–1912)
 Russian Empire (1900–1912)
 Czechoslovakia (1920–1936)
 Poland (1924–1936)
 Romania (1924–1936)
 Soviet Union (1952–1988)
 Unified Team (1992)

Ukraine first participated at the Olympic Games as an independent nation in 1994, and has sent athletes to compete in every Summer Olympic Games and Winter Olympic Games since then.

Previously, Ukrainian athletes competed as part of the Soviet Union at the Olympics from 1952 to 1988, and after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine was part of the Unified Team in 1992.

Ukraine has won a total of 96 medals at the Summer Games and five at the Winter Games, with gymnastics as the nation's top medal-producing sport.

The National Olympic Committee of Ukraine was created in 1990 and recognized by the International Olympic Committee in 1993.

2019 Pan American Championship

2019 Pan American Cup
Copa Panamericana
Tournament details
Teams24 (from 2 confederations)
Venue(s)13 (in 13 host cities)
Tournament statistics
Matches played52

The Pan-American Cup 2019 (or Copa Panamericana 2019) is a proposed second edition of the association football tournament Pan-American Cup started in 2016 to be scheduled for 2019.

Alfredo Hawit, when Acting President of CONCACAF announced that the competition would be expected take place in 2016, as a celebration of CONMEBOL's centenary.[46]

Luis Chiriboga, the President of the Ecuadorian Football Federation stated that the United States and Mexico were potential hosts of at least one stage of the competition.[47] CONMEBOL President Nicolás Leoz said "Mexico has the possibility [of hosting the competition], no doubt. Hopefully we can organize a big event, because we have 100 years and we want to celebrate big,".[48] Hawit, however would prefer the competition to be hosted in United States for financial reasons stating that "the market is in the United States, the stadiums are in the United States, the people are in the United States. The study that we have made [shows] that everything’s in the United States."[49]

CONCACAF officially commented on the competition in July 2012, CONCACAF President Jeffrey Webb commented that there was much organizing to be done.[50]

Participants

All ten members of CONMEBOL are expected to participate along with teams from the CONCACAF region.[46] Leoz suggested that 10 CONMEBOL teams will participate along with six teams from the CONCACAF region.[51]

CONMEBOLCONCACAF
  1.  Argentina
  2.  Bolivia
  3.  Brazil
  4.  Chile
  5.  Colombia
  6.  Ecuador
  7.  Paraguay
  8.  Peru
  9.  Uruguay
  10.  Venezuela
  1.  United States (host)
  2.  Mexico (invitee)
  3.  Canada
  4.  Guatemala
  5.  Cuba
  6.  Haiti
  7.  Dominican Republic
  8.  Honduras
  9.  El Salvador
  10.  Nicaragua
  11.  Costa Rica
  12.  Puerto Rico
  13.  Panama
  14.  Jamaica

List of Secretaries-General

President pro temporePortraitStateNational partyTook officeLeft office
1Néstor Kirchner
Néstor Carlos Kirchner
 ArgentinaFront for VictoryJusticialist Party4 May 201027 October 2010
The first Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations and died in office.
Post vacant by death
2María Emma Mejía
María Emma Mejía Vélez
 ColombiaAlternative Democratic PoleColombian Liberal Party9 May 201111 June 2012
The second Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.
3Alí Rodríguez
Alí Rodríguez Araque
 VenezuelaUnited Socialist Party of Venezuela11 June 20124 January 2014
The third Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.
2Lula da Silva
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
 BrazilWorkers' Party (Brazil)4 January 201431 October 2016
First former national president as Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.
3Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Cristina Elisabet Fernández de Kirchner
 ArgentinaFront for Victory1 November 201631 October 2017
First former national president as Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.
3Michelle Bachelet
Verónica Michelle Bachelet Jeria
 ChileSocialist Party of Chile1 November 201731 October 2019
The third Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.
2Juan Manuel Santos
Juan Manuel Santos Calderón
 ColombiaSocial Party of National Unity1 November 201931 October 2020
First former national president as Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.
2Rafael Correa
Rafael Vicente Correa Delgado
 EcuadorPAIS Alliance1 November 2020Incumbent
First former national president as Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations.

Infobox European Union 2013 into Unasur 2030

European Union
Motto: "United in diversity[52][53][54]
Anthem: 
Ode to Joy[53] (orchestral)
Political centres
Largest cityLondon
Official languages
Demonym(s)European[57]
Member states
Leaders
Herman Van Rompuy (EPP)
José Manuel Barroso (EPP)
LegislatureLegislature of the European Union
Council of the European Union
European Parliament
Establishment
23 July 1952
1 January 1958
1 November 1993
Area
• Total
4,324,782 km2 (1,669,808 sq mi) (7tha)
• Water (%)
3.08
Population
• 2012 estimate
503,492,041[58] (3rda)
• Density
116.2/km2 (301.0/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2011 estimate
• Total
$15.821 trillion[59] (1sta)
• Per capita
$31,607[59] (15tha)
GDP (nominal)2011 estimate
• Total
$17.577 trillion[59] (1sta)
• Per capita
$35,116[60] (14tha)
Gini (2010)30.4[61]
medium
HDI (2011)  0.876[39]
very high (13th / 25tha)
Currency
Time zoneUTC+0 to +2
• Summer (DST)
UTC+1 to +3[62]
Calling codesee list
Internet TLD.eu[63]
Website
europa.eu
  1. If considered as a single entity.

List of countries in the Americas by population

This is a list of countries and dependent territories in the Americas by population, which is sorted by the mid-year normalized demographic projections.

Table

RankCountry
(or dependent territory)
July 1, 2013
projection[64]
% of
pop.
Average
relative
annual
growth
(%)[65]
Average
absolute
annual
growth
[66]
Estimated
doubling
time
(Years)[67]
Alternative
figure
DateSource
1  United States316,260,00033.100.742,330,00094338,904,000April 27, 2024Official population clock
2  Brazil195,632,00020.480.871,685,00080193,946,886July 1, 2012Official estimate
3  Mexico117,147,00012.261.381,597,00050112,336,538June 12, 2010Final 2010 census result
4  Colombia47,130,0004.931.17544,0006052,845,000April 27, 2024Official population clock
5  Argentina41,350,0004.331.13464,0006140,117,096October 27, 2010Final 2010 census result
6  Canada35,247,0003.691.10384,0006335,056,064January 2013Official estimate
7  Peru30,476,0003.191.12339,0006230,475,144June 30, 2013Official estimate
8  Venezuela29,760,0003.111.67490,0004228,946,101October 30, 2011Preliminary 2011 census result
9  Chile16,841,0001.761.01168,0006916,634,603April 9, 2012Final 2012 census result
10  Ecuador15,779,0001.651.66258,0004218,266,500April 27, 2024Official population clock
11  Guatemala15,440,0001.623.04456,0002315,438,384June 30, 2013Official estimate
12  Cuba11,163,0001.17-0.01-1,000-11,163,934September 15, 2012Preliminary 2012 census result
13  Haiti10,671,0001.122.48258,0002810,413,2112012Official estimate
14  Bolivia10,517,0001.102.02208,0003510,389,913November 21, 2012Preliminary 2012 census result
15  Dominican Republic9,745,0001.021.22117,000579,445,281December 1, 2010Final 2010 census result
16  Honduras8,578,0000.902.30193,000308,385,0722012Official estimate
17  Paraguay6,849,0000.722.64176,000276,672,6312012Official estimate
18  El Salvador6,635,0000.692.38154,000306,183,000June 30, 2010Official estimate
19  Nicaragua6,216,0000.652.39145,000296,071,045June 30, 2012Official estimate
20  Costa Rica4,667,0000.491.5772,000454,667,0962013Official estimate
21  Puerto Rico (US)[68]3,641,0000.38-0.71-26,000-3,667,084July 1, 2012Official estimate
22  Panama3,605,0000.381.8465,000383,405,813May 16, 2010Final 2010 census result
23  Uruguay3,297,0000.350.186,0003813,286,314September 30, 2011Final 2011 census result
24  Jamaica2,720,0000.280.3710,0001882,709,300December 31, 2011Official estimate
25  Trinidad and Tobago1,344,0000.140.527,0001331,328,019January 9, 20112011 census result
26  Guyana798,0000.080.504,000138784,8942010Official estimate
27File:Bandera OECS (Caribe Oriental-Eastern Caribbean).jpg Eastern Caribbean States592,0000.070.092,000117566,526May 10, 2010Preliminary 2010 census result
28  Suriname539,0000.060.945,00074534,189August 13, 2012Preliminary 2012 census result
29  Guadeloupe (France)409,0000.040.492,000141403,355January 1, 2010Official estimate
30  Martinique (France)398,0000.040.251,000276394,173January 1, 2010Official estimate
31  Bahamas368,0000.041.385,00051351,461May 3, 2010Final 2010 census result
32  Belize340,0000.042.729,00026312,971May 12, 2010Preliminary 2010 census result
33  Caribbean Netherlands (Kingdom of the Netherlands)324,0000.032.504,00048317,429January 1, 2010Official estimate
34  Barbados276,0000.030.361,000191274,200July 1, 2010Official estimate
35  French Guiana259,0000.033.609,00020229,040January 1, 2010Official estimate
36  United States Virgin Islands (US)106,0000.010.000-106,405April 1, 2010Final 2010 census result
37  Bermuda (UK)65,0000.010.000-64,237May 20, 2010Final 2010 census result
38  Cayman Islands (UK)60,0000.013.452,0002055,456October 10, 2010Final 2010 census result
39  Greenland (Denmark)56,0000.010.000-56,370January 1, 2013Official estimate
40  Saint Martin (France)39,0000.002.631,0002736,979January 1, 2010Official estimate
41  Turks and Caicos Islands (UK)33,0000.003.131,0002331,458January 25, 20122012 census result
42  British Virgin Islands (UK)32,0000.003.231,0002229,5372010Official estimate
43  Anguilla (UK)14,0000.000.000-13,452May 11, 2011Preliminary 2011 census result
44  Saint Barthélemy (France)10,0000.0011.111,00078,938January 1, 2010Official estimate
45  Saint Pierre and Miquelon (France)6,0000.000.000-6,081January 1, 2010Official estimate
46  Montserrat (UK)5,0000.000.000-4,922May 12, 20112011 census result
47  Falkland Islands (UK)[69]3,0000.000.000-2,563April 15, 20122012 census result
Total955,434,000100.001.0710,148,00065

References

External links


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).