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Report concerning the added value of macro-regional strategies

Reports

Date: 27 jun 2013

Period: 2007-2013

Theme: Business support, Culture, Energy, Environment, EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, EU Strategy for the Danube Region, Health, Rural development, Tourism, Transport, Urban development, Research and innnovation, Research & Development, EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region, Social inclusion, Jobs, Education and Training, Structural Funds management and Governance

Languages:   bg | cs | da | de | el | en | es | et | fi | fr | hu | it | lt | lv | mt | nl | pl | pt | ro | sk | sl | sv

The macro-regional concept arose from a wish for a collective response to environmental deterioration of the Baltic Sea, and for concerted action on challenges and opportunities of that region. This resulted in the EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region (EUSBSR), adopted 2009. The EU Strategy for the Danube Region (EUSDR) was adopted in June 2011, and the European Council invited the Commission to present an EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region by end 2014 subject to the evaluation of the concept. Other regions are considering the merits of the approach.The objective is a coordinated response to issues better handled together than separately. The two strategies aim to overcome obstacles holding up development, and unlock the potential of the regions. They seek to place issues in a multilateral setting, and to reach out beyond current EU borders to work as equals with neighbours. The approach encourages participants to overcome not only national frontiers, but also barriers to thinking more strategically and imaginatively about the opportunities available.