Wikipedia:WikiProject Countries

This WikiProject helps develop country-related pages (of all types) and works toward standardizing the formats of sets and types of country-related pages. For example, the sets of Culture of x, Administrative divisions of x, and Demographics of x articles, etc. – (where "x" is a country name) – and the various types of pages, like stubs, categories, etc.



Scope
This WikiProject is focused on country coverage (content/gaps) and presentation (navigation, page naming, layout, formatting) on Wikipedia, especially country articles (articles with countries as their titles), country outlines, and articles with a country in their name (such as Demographics of Germany), but also all other country-related articles, stubs, categories, and lists pertaining to countries.

Navigation
This WikiProject helps Wikipedia's navigation-related WikiProjects (WikiProject Outline of knowledge, WikiProject Categories, WikiProject Portals, etc.) develop and maintain the navigation structures (menus, outlines, lists, templates, and categories) pertaining to countries. And since most countries share the same subtopics ("Cities of", "Cuisine of", "Religion in", "Prostitution in", etc.), it is advantageous to standardize their naming, and their order of presentation in Wikipedia's indexes and table-of-contents-like pages.

Subpages

 * List of.

Formatting
Many country and country-related articles have been extensively developed, but much systematic or similar information about many countries is not presented in a consistent way. Inconsistencies are rampant in article naming, headings, data presented, types of things covered, order of coverage, etc. This WikiProject works towards standardizing page layouts of country-related articles of the same type ("Geography of", "Government of", "Politics of", "Wildlife of", etc.).

We are also involved with the standardization of country-related stubs, standardizing the structure of country-related lists and categories (the category trees for countries should be identical for the most part, as most countries share the same subcategories – though there will be some differences of course).

Goals

 * 1) Provide a centralized resource guide of all related topics in Wikipedia, as well as spearhead the effort to improve and develop them.
 * 2) Create uniform templates that serve to identify all related articles as part of this project, as well as stub templates to englobe all related stubs under specific categories.
 * 3) Standardize articles about different nations, cultures, holidays, and geography.
 * 4) Verify historical accuracy and neutrality of all articles within the scope of the project.
 * 5) Create, expand and cleanup related articles.

Structure and guidelines
Although referenced during FA and GA reviews, this structure guide is advisory only, and should not be enforced against the wishes of those actually working on the article in question.  Articles may be best modeled on the layout of an existing article of appropriate structure and topic (See: Canada, Japan and Australia)

Main polities
A country is a distinct part of the world, such as a state, nation, or other political entity. When referring to a specific polity, the term "country" may refer to a sovereign state, states with limited recognition, constituent country, or a dependent territory.

Opening paragraphs
The article should start with a good simple introduction, giving name of the country, general location in the world, bordering countries, seas and the like. Also give other names by which the country may still be known (for example Holland, Persia). Also, add a few facts about the country, the things that it is known for (for example the mentioning of windmills in the Netherlands article).

The etymology of a country's name, if worth noting, may be dealt with in the Etymology or History section. Naming disputes may also belong in the Etymology or History section.

Overly detailed information or infobox data duplication such as listing random examples, numbered statistics or naming individuals should be reserved for the infobox or body of the article.

Example:. Canada and Japan  as below.

Infobox
There is a table with quick facts about the country called an infobox. A template for the table can be found at the bottom of this page.

Although the table can be moved out to the template namespace (to e.g. Template:CountryName Infobox ) and thus easen the look of the edit page, most Wikipedians still disapprove as of now, see the talk page.

The contents are as follows:


 * The official long-form name of the country in the local language is to go on top as the caption. If there are several official names (languages), list all (if reasonably feasible). The conventional long-form name (in English), if it differs from the local long-form name, should follow the local name(s). This is not a parameter to list every recognized language of a country,  but rather for listing officially  recognize national languages.
 * The conventional short-form name of the country, recognised by the majority of the English-speaking world; ideally, this should also be used for the name of the article.
 * A picture of the national flag. You can find flags at the List of flags. A smaller version should be included in the table itself, a larger-sized version in a page titled Flag of , linked to via the "In Detail" cell. Instead of two different images, use the autothumbnail function that wiki offers.
 * A picture of the national coat of arms. A good source is required for this, but not yet available. It should be no more than 125 pixels in width.
 * Below the flag and coat of arms is room for the national motto, often displayed on the coat of arms (with translation, if necessary).
 * The official language(s) of the country. (rot the place to list every recognized or used language)
 * The political status. Specify if it is a sovereign state or a dependent territory.
 * The capital city, or cities. Explain the differences if there are multiple capital cities using a footnote (see example at the Netherlands).
 * If the data on the population is recent and reliable, add the largest city of the country.
 * Land area: The area of the country in square kilometres (km²) and square miles (sq mi) with the world-ranking of this country. Also add the % of water, which can be calculated from the data in the Geography article (make it negligible if ~0%).
 * Population: The number of inhabitants and the world-ranking; also include a year for this estimate (should be 2000 for now, as that is the date of the ranking). For the population density you can use the numbers now available.
 * GDP: The amount of the gross domestic product on ppp base and the world ranking. also include the amount total and per head.
 * HDI: Information pertaining to the UN Human Development Index – the value, year (of value), rank (with ordinal), and category (colourised as per the HDI country list).
 * Currency; the name of the local currency. Use the pipe if the currency name is also used in other countries: dollar.
 * Time zone(s); the time zone or zones in which the country is relative to UTC
 * National anthem; the name of the National anthem and a link to the article about it.
 * Internet TLD; the top-level domain code for this country.
 * Calling Code; the international Calling Code used for dialing this country.

Lead map
There is a long-standing practice that areas out of a state's control should be depicted differently on introductory maps, to not give the impression the powers of a state extend somewhere they do not. This is for various types of a lack of control, be it another state (eg. Crimea, bits of Kashmir) or a separatist body (eg. DPR, TRNC).

Sections
A section should be written in summary style, containing just the important facts. Undue weight can be given in several ways, including but not limited to the depth of detail, the quantity of text, prominence of placement, the juxtaposition of statements, and the use of imagery. Main article fixation is an observed effect that editors are likely to encounter in county articles. If a section it is too large, information should be transferred to the sub-article. Avoid sections focusing on criticisms or controversies. Try to achieve a more neutral text by folding debates into the narrative, rather than isolating them into sections.

Articles may consist of the following sections:
 * Etymology sections are often placed first (sometimes called name depending on the information in the article). Include only if due information is available.
 * History – An outline of the major events in the country's history (about 4 to 6 paragraphs, depending on complexity of history), including some detail on current events. Sub-article: "History of X"
 * Politics – Overview of the current governmental system, possibly previous forms, some short notes on the parliament. Sub-article: "Politics of X"
 * Administrative divisions – Overview of the administrative subdivisions of the country. Name the section after the first level of subdivisions (and subsequent levels, if available) (e.g. provinces, states, departments, districts, etc.) and give the English equivalent name, when available. Also include overseas possessions. This section should also include an overview map of the country and subdivisions, if available. The CIA World Factbook Maps can be used as a basis for the map, but plenty of other sources are available.
 * Geography – Details of the country's main geographic features and climate. Historical weather boxes should be reserved for sub articles. Sub-article: "Geography of X"
 * Economy – Details on the country's economy, major industries, bit of economic history, major trade partners, a tad comparison etc. Sub-article: "Economy of X"
 * Demographics – Mention the languages spoken, the major religions, some well known properties of the people of X, by which they are known. Uncontextualized data should be avoided. (See WP:NOTSTATS) Sub-article: "Demographics of X".
 * Culture – Summary of the country's specific forms of art (anything from painting to film) and its best known cultural contributions. Caution should be taken to ensure that the sections are not simply a listing of names or mini biographies of individuals accomplishments. Good example Canada. Sub-article: "Culture of X".
 * See also – Aim to include relevant information within the article and reduce the See also section See WP:See also.   ('See also" sections of country articles normally only contain links to "Index of country" and "Outline of country" articles, alongside the main portal(s)).
 * References – Sums up "Notes", "References", and all "Further Reading" or "Bibliography"
 * External links – Links to official websites about the country. See WP:External links

Size

 * Articles that have gone through FA and GA reviews generally consists of approximately 8,000 to 10,000 words as per WP:SIZERULE, with a lead usually four paragraphs as per MOS:LEADLENGTH.


 * Australia = Prose size (text only): 60 kB (9,304 words) "readable prose size"
 * Bulgaria = Prose size (text only): 56 kB (8,847 words) "readable prose size"
 * Canada = Prose size (text only): 67 kB (9,973 words) "readable prose size"
 * Germany = Prose size (text only): 54 kB (8,456 words) "readable prose size"
 * Japan = Prose size (text only): 51 kB (8,104 words) "readable prose size"
 * East Timor = Prose size (text only): 53 kB (8152 words) "readable prose size"
 * Malaysia = Prose size (text only): 57 kB (9092 words) "readable prose size"
 * New Zealand = Prose size (text only): 62 kB (9761 words) "readable prose size"
 * Philippines = Prose size (text only): 62 kB (9178 words) "readable prose size"

Hatnote
The link should be shown as below: Avoid link clutter of multiple child articles in a hierarchical setup as hatnotes. For example, Canada is a summary section with a hatnote to Economy of Canada that summarizes the history with a hatnote to Economic history of Canada. See WP:SUMMARYHATNOTE for more recommended hatnote usages.

Charts
As prose text is preferred, overly detailed statistical charts and diagrams such as economic trends, weather boxes, historical population charts, and past elections results, etc, should be reserved for main sub articles on the topic as per WP:DETAIL as outlined at WP:NOTSTATS.

Galleries
Galleries or clusters of images are generally discouraged as they may cause undue weight to one particular section of a summary article and may cause  accessibility problems, such as sand­wich­ing of text, images too small  or fragmented image display for some readers. See WP:GALLERY for more information.

Footers
As noted at Categories, lists, and series boxes the number of templates at the bottom of any article should be kept to a minimum. Country pages generally have footers that link to pages for countries in their geographic region. Footers for international organizations are not added to country pages, but they rather can go on subpages such as "Economy of..." and "Foreign relations of..." Categories for some of these organizations are also sometimes added. Templates for supranational organizations like the European Union and CARICOM are permitted. A list of the footers that have been created can be found at WikiProject Countries/Templates/Navboxes, however note that many of these are not currently in use.

Transclusions
Transclusions are generally discouraged in country articles for reasons outlined below.

Lists of countries
To determine which entities should be considered separate "countries" or included on lists, use the entries in ISO 3166-1 plus the list of states with limited recognition, except:
 * Lists based on only a single source should follow that source.
 * Specific lists might need more logical criteria. For example, list of sovereign states omits non-sovereign entities listed by ISO-3166-1. Lists of sports teams list whichever entities that have teams, regardless of sovereignty. Lists of laws might follow jurisdiction boundaries (for example, England and Wales is a single jurisdiction).

For consistency with other Wikipedia articles, the names of entities do not need to follow sources or ISO-3166-1. The names used as the titles of English Wikipedia articles are a safe choice for those that are disputed.

Related WikiProjects

 * WikiProject Former countries
 * WikiProject Micronations
 * WikiProject Limited recognition

Popular pages

 * WikiProject Countries/Popular pages