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| Switzerland (French Suisse;
German Schweiz; Italian Svizzera), federal republic in west central Europe,
bounded on the north by France and Germany, on the east by Austria and
Liechtenstein, on the south by Italy, and on the west by France. The country
has an area of 41,288 sq km (15,941 sq mi). Its largest city is Zürich,
and the capital is Bern.
Land and Resources Switzerland is one of the most mountainous countries of Europe, with more than 70 percent of its area covered by the Alps, in the central and southern sections, and the Jura, in the northwest. The Swiss Alps are part of the largest mountain system in Europe, and are famous for their jagged peaks and steep gorges. There are several ranges within the Alps, including the Pennine range, which has Switzerland's highest peak, the 4634-m (15,203-ft) Dufourspitze of Monte Rosa. The Jura (Celtic for "forest") are much lower and smaller than the Alps, and are popular for cross-country skiing. The renowned Swiss watchmaking industry began in the Jura Mountains. Between these two mountain systems lies the Swiss plateau, about 400 m (about 1300 ft) above sea level in average elevation and some 50 km (some 30 mi) wide; it extends from Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) in the extreme southwest to the Bodensee (Lake of Constance) in the extreme northeast. The plateau is thickly studded with hills. Between the ranges of the Alps and Jura also stretch long valleys connected by transverse gorges; one such valley is the Engadine along the Inn River in the southeast. Nearly every Swiss valley is traversed by streams, often interrupted by picturesque waterfalls, including the Staubbach Falls (about 290 m/950 ft) in the canton of Bern. The principal river system is formed by the Rhine and its tributaries. Other important rivers are the Rhône, Ticino, and Inn. However, the Swiss rivers are not navigable for any appreciable extent. Switzerland is famous for its many lakes, particularly those of the Alpine region, known for their scenic beauty. The most important include Lake Geneva, Bodensee, Lake of Lugano, and Lake Maggiore (at which lies Switzerland's lowest point, 194 m (636 ft) above sea level), which are not wholly within Swiss borders; and Lake of Neuchâtel, Lake of Lucerne and Zürichsee, Brienzersee, and Thunersee, which are entirely within Switzerland. Climate
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Executive
In Switzerland, executive power is vested
in the Bundesrat, or Federal Council, composed of seven members who are
elected to four-year terms by a joint session of the bicameral parliament.
The council is responsible to the parliament. The legislature elects a
president from among the members of the council for a one-year term. The
constitution expressly prohibits the reelection of a president to consecutive
terms of office.
Legislature
The Swiss parliament, called the Federal
Assembly, consists of two houses: the Ständerat, or Council of States,
with 46 members (two for each full canton and one for each half canton)
elected for varying periods at the discretion of the canton; and the Nationalrat,
or National Council, with 200 members elected for four-year terms under
a system of proportional representation.
Judiciary
The Federal Tribunal at Lausanne is composed
of 30 judges who are appointed for six-year terms by the Federal Assembly.
The court has final jurisdiction in suits between the cantonal and federal
governments, corporations and individuals, and between cantons. It has
original jurisdiction only in cases involving offenses against the confederation.
In addition, each canton has its own autonomous system of justice, including
civil and criminal courts and a court of appeals. Capital punishment was
abolished in Switzerland in 1942.
Local Government
All powers not delegated to the confederation
by the Swiss constitution are reserved to the cantons. The forms of cantonal
government vary, but each of the 20 full cantons and 6 half-cantons has
an elected legislative council and an executive council. In the smaller
cantons, the council is a Landsgemeinde, a general assembly of voting citizens
who decide matters by voice vote. In most cantons, however, the legislative
council is a representative body elected by popular vote. Women gained
the right to vote in local and cantonal elections in most areas during
the 1970s; the last male bastion, Appenzell Inner-Rhoden, changed in 1990.
The commune is the basic local unit of government; Switzerland has more
than 3000 communes in all, and they are largely autonomous in many governmental
matters. Several communes are grouped into a district, which is headed
by a prefect representing the cantonal government.
Political Parties
The strongest Swiss political parties
are the Radical Democratic Party, standing for strong federal power; the
Social Democratic Party, advocating democratic socialism; and the Christian
Democratic People's Party, opposing centralization of power. Other political
parties of note are the Swiss People's Party, the Independent Alliance,
the Liberal Party, and the Greens, an environmentalist group.
Health and Welfare
The Federal Insurance Law of 1911 regulates
accident and sickness insurance. Accident insurance is compulsory for most
officials and employees. Old-age and survivor's insurance, which also includes
disability benefits, is compulsory and is financed by a payroll tax on
both employers and employees. Unemployment insurance became compulsory
under a 1976 law.
Defense
Service in the Swiss militia is compulsory
for all males between the ages of 20 and 42. Switzerland does not maintain
a standing army, however, so service consists of relatively short periods
of training. Because rifles, uniforms, and other equipment are kept at
home, Switzerland can mobilize completely within about 48 hours. If mobilized,
the Swiss armed forces would include about 399,300 troops. .
History
In pre-Roman times the territory now known
as Switzerland was inhabited by the Helvetii in the west and the Rhaetians,
a people believed to have been related to the Etruscans, in the east. Julius
Caesar and the Romans conquered the region, which they named Helvetia,
in the 1st century BC, and it became thoroughly Romanized. During the Germanic
invasions that swept over the Western Roman Empire in the 4th century
AD, the Bourguignons and the Alamanni conquered Helvetia.
The Middle Ages
The Franks in turn conquered the Alamanni
in the 5th century AD, and the Bourguignons in the early 6th century. The
Franks introduced a new civilization based largely on Christianity. On
the dissolution of the Frankish Carolingian Empire in the 9th century,
most of Switzerland became part of the duchy of Alemannia, or Swabia, one
of the great feudal states of the German Kingdom; the southwestern part
was incorporated into the kingdom of Transjurane Bourgogne. In 1033 the
Bourguignon portion was acquired by Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II, and Switzerland
became a part of his empire. It consisted of a collection of petty states,
ruled by dukes, counts, bishops, and abbots, and of a number of small city-states,
independent by imperial charter, which later became cantonal commonwealths.
Struggle for Independence
In 1276 Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf I of
the Habsburg dynasty attempted to assert feudal rights in Switzerland,
making his power a threat to the traditional liberties of the Swiss. To
resist Rudolf's aggression, the three so-called forest cantons-Uri, Schwyz,
and Unterwalden-around the Lake of Lucerne, entered a league for mutual
defense in 1291. During the 14th century Zürich, Glarus, Bern, Lucerne,
and Zug joined the league, and in the 15th century Fribourg and Solothurn
joined. In 1474 the Habsburgs, unable to cope with the militant Swiss mountaineers,
abandoned their attempts to acquire the region as a family appanage, and
the Swiss confederation became directly dependent on the empire.
In 1499 Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian
I attempted to abrogate various Swiss governmental rights; in the ensuing
war he was defeated, and by the Treaty of Basel on September 22, 1499,
he was compelled to recognize the virtual independence of the Swiss. By
1513 Appenzell, Schaffhausen, and Basel had entered the confederation,
each independent as a canton and sending two delegates to a federal assembly.
Because of their skill and bravery in war, Swiss mercenaries became famous
throughout Europe. In the course of the wars between Italy and France in
the early 16th century, Swiss troops, fighting with the French as mercenaries,
were able to annex the Italian districts and towns that later formed the
canton of Ticino. The Swiss troops then fought against the French, and
were defeated in 1515. This led to the introduction of Switzerland's neutrality
policy. In 1536 the Bernese Swiss took Lausanne and various territories
from the duchy of Savoy.
Reformation
The Protestant Reformation in Switzerland
started in 1518, when a country pastor named Huldreich Zwingli began to
denounce the sale of indulgences by the Roman Catholic church. Subsequently,
under Zwingli's leadership, the city of Zürich revolted against church
dogma by burning relics, banning the adoration of saints, and releasing
clerics from their vows of celibacy. Vigorously backed by the merchant
class, such innovations further asserted the city's independence from both
the Roman Catholic church and the Holy Roman Empire. Other Swiss towns,
such as Basel and Bern, quickly adopted similar reforms. In 1536 Geneva,
where the French theologian John Calvin had just settled, revolted against
the duchy of Savoy and refused to acknowledge the authority of its Roman
Catholic bishop. Calvin organized his church democratically, incorporating
ideas of representative government. From 1541 to 1564 Geneva became the
stronghold of the Calvinist brand of Protestantism. Although the cantons
preserved their neutrality in the Thirty Years' War of 1618 to 1648, Swiss
diplomacy was able to maneuver formal recognition of Switzerland as a completely
independent state by the Peace of Westphalia in 1648.
Unification
During the 1790s the French Revolution
spread to Switzerland; the French continually intervened in support of
Swiss revolutionaries, a group that sought to promote political reforms
and the establishment of a strong national government, and in 1798 the
revolutionaries occupied all Swiss territory. The Swiss confederation had
until that time been a loose defensive alliance, but Napoleon Bonaparte,
the future emperor of France, unified the country under the name Helvetic
Republic and imposed a written constitution, which, like the French military
occupation, was bitterly resented by most of the Swiss. In 1803, when it
was in his interest to have Switzerland friendly, Napoleon withdrew the
occupation troops and by the Act of Mediation granted a new constitution
with Swiss approval. The Congress of Vienna, in 1815, recognized the perpetual
neutrality of Switzerland, and Swiss territory was expanded to include
22 cantons; since that time the country's boundaries have remained virtually
unchanged.
The period following the integration of
Switzerland was one of attempted adjustment to the newly won unity. Conflict
existed between autocratic and democratic elements and between Roman Catholic
and Protestant areas. In 1847 the Roman Catholic cantons formed a league,
the Sonderbund. The federal government declared the formation of such a
league a violation of the constitution. Civil war resulted when the league
refused to disband. The Sonderbund was defeated by the federal government,
and the ensuing constitution of 1848 greatly increased the federal power.
It was followed by the constitution of 1874, which, with modifications,
is still in force; the 1874 constitution completed the development of Switzerland
from a group of cantons to a unified federal state. However, Switzerland
is unusual regarding the power vested within the cantons and individual
communes. For example, it is the communes that grant individuals Swiss
citizenship.
A Neutral Nation
Because of the traditional neutrality
of the country, Switzerland became the favored site of international conferences
and the headquarters of many organizations. The main office of the International
Red Cross was established there in 1863, as was that of the League of Nations
following World War I (1914-1918). Switzerland was a league member but,
after maintaining neutrality and harboring political refugees during World
War II (1939-1945), the country refused to join the United Nations (UN)
on the grounds that certain obligations of membership were incompatible
with Swiss neutrality. It did, however, become a member of many agencies
affiliated with the UN, and it maintains a permanent observer at UN headquarters.
It also served on the neutral nations' commission supervising the 1953
truce agreement in Korea and contributed money to UN peacekeeping efforts
in Cyprus. It became a member of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), an international trade organization that was replaced in 1995 by
the World Trade Organization (WTO). WTO headquarters are in Geneva.
In 1948 Switzerland joined the Organization
for European Economic Cooperation. It became a founding member of the European
Free Trade Association in 1959 and in 1963 joined the Council of Europe.
Domestic Issues
In February 1971 Switzerland for the first
time granted women the>