The United States of America is a constitutional federal republic
comprising fifty states and a federal district. The country is situated
mostly in central North America, where its forty-eight contiguous
states and Washington, D.C., the capital district, lie between the
Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, bordered by Canada to the north and Mexico
to the south. The state of Alaska is in the northwest of the continent,
with Canada to its east and Russia to the west across the Bering
Strait, and the state of Hawaii is an archipelago in the mid-Pacific.
The United States also possesses several territories, or insular areas,
scattered around the Caribbean and Pacific.
At 3.79 million
square miles (9.83 million km²) and with more than 300 million people,
the United States is the third or fourth largest country by total area,
and third largest by land area and by population. The United States is
one of the world's most ethnically diverse nations, the product of
large-scale immigration from many countries. The U.S. economy is the
largest national economy in the world, with a nominal 2006 gross
domestic product (GDP) of more than US$13 trillion (over 19% of the
world total based on purchasing power parity).
The nation was
founded by thirteen colonies of Great Britain located along the
Atlantic seaboard. Proclaiming themselves "states," they issued the
Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. The rebellious states
defeated Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War, the first
successful colonial war of independence. A federal convention adopted
the current United States Constitution on September 17, 1787; its
ratification the following year made the states part of a single
republic. The Bill of Rights, comprising ten constitutional amendments,
was ratified in 1791.
In the nineteenth century, the United
States acquired land from France, Spain, Great Britain, Mexico, and
Russia, and annexed the Republic of Texas and the Republic of Hawaii.
Disputes between the agrarian South and industrial North over states'
rights and the expansion of the institution of slavery provoked the
American Civil War of the 1860s. The North's victory prevented a
permanent split of the country and led to the end of slavery in the
United States. The Spanish-American War and World War I confirmed the
nation's status as a military power. In 1945, the United States emerged
from World War II as the first country with nuclear weapons, a
permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, and a founding
member of NATO. In the post–Cold War era, the United States is the only
remaining superpower—accounting for approximately 50% of global
military spending—and a dominant economic, political, and cultural
force in the world.
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