The EU Macro-Regions : Approaches and Patterns
Ivano Dileo
Department of Political Science, University of Bari Aldo MoroResumen
With the decline of the nation state and the increasing importance of regionalisation, the EU has launched macro-regions, i.e., areas, including territories from several countries, that share common goals and operating under multi-level governance. This paper focuses on the EU territorial cooperation strategy, utilising the concept of "macro--region" and the perspective of the macro-regional approach. Following the first macro-regions (such as the Baltic Sea Region and the Danube Region), the EU recently launched the Adriatic-Ionian Macro-regional Strategy, which was seen as an additional tool for cooperation between local and regional authorities that overlooks the Adriatic Sea. Nevertheless, future developments in the region appear at the present to be quite uncertain, owing to structural industrial decline, rural marginalisation and a lack of infrastructure adequate to support the entire cooperation area. To overcome these constraints, the concept of macro-region must be strengthened by creating alternative ways to engage in cross-border cooperation between areas subject to similar conditions. Matching among regions that belong to different Euro-countries within the framework of a macro-region may be the best way to forge a consistent path towards territorial, economic and social integration. This will help to create a common pole of cooperation characterized by various strategies that can act as accelerators in creating territorial capital.
Palabras clave:
macro-regions, cooperation, EU, economic planningCitas
Blatter J. 2004. From "Spaces of Place" to "Spaces of Flows"? Territorial and Functional Governance, in Cross-border Regions in Europe and North America. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 28(3): 530-549.
Boschma R. 2005. Proximity and Innovation: A critical Assessment. Regional Studies, 39(1): 61-74.
Camagni R. 2006. The rationale for territorial cohesion: issues and possible policy strategies. In: The process of territorial cohesion in Europe. Ed. L. Pedrazzini. Franco Angeli, Milano, p. 53-67.
Capello R. 1999. Spatial Transfer of Knowledge in High Technology Milieux: Learning Versus Collective Learning Process. Regional Studies, 33(4): 353- 365.
Cappellin R. 1998. Transborder Co-operation along the External Borders and the Turnabout of Regional Development Policies: A Mediterranean Perspective. Hedegaard & Lindstrom (eds.). The EBI Yearbook, Springer, Berlin.
Deas I., Lord A. 2006. From a New Regionalism to an Unusual Regionalism? The Emergence of Nonstandard Regional Spaces and Lessons for the Territorial Reorganisation of the State. Urban Studies, 43(10): 1847-1877.
Duhr S., Stead D., Zonneveld W. 2007. The Europeanization of Spatial Planning through Territorial Cooperation: Introduction to the Special Issue. Planning Practice and Research, 22(3): 291-307.
Baltic Sea Region Programme 2007-2013. 2009. European Commission. First 24 transnational projects and their contribution to the EU strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, http://ec.euro-pa.eu/regional.
Communication concerning the European Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region. 2012. European Commission. COM (2012) 128, Brussels.
Giffinger R., Suitner J. 2010. Danube Region Strategy - Arguments for a Territorial Capital Based Multilevel Approach. SPATIUM International Review, 23: 9-16.
Groenendijk N.S. 2013. Macro-regions: regional integration within and beyond the EU. In 21st NISPAcee annual conference, Belgrade, Serbia.
Keating M. 2004. European Integration and the Nationalities Question. Politics and Society, 32(3): 367-388.
Kelleher J., Batterbury S., Stern E. 1999. The Thematic Evaluation of the Partnership Principle in the EU Structural Fund Programmes 1994-1999: Final Report. European Commission, Brussels.
Lundquist K.J., Trippl M. 2013. Distance, Proximity and Types of Cross-border Innovation Systems: A Conceptual Analysis. Regional Studies, 47: 450-460.
Maggioni M.A., Uberti T.E. 2009. Knowledge Networks across Europe: Which Distance Matters? The Annals of Regional Science, 43(3): 691- 720.
Mirwaldt K., Mcmaster I., Bachteler J. 2010. The Concept of Macro-Regions: Practice and Prospects. European Policies Research Centre.
Nacchia C. 2011. European Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region: A Pilot Strategy for Other Regions ? In: Walking the Tightrope: Europe between Europenization and Globalization. Eds. G. De Long, I. Megens, M. Van Der Waal. Groeningen, University of Groeningen, p. 181-201.
Nadin V., Stead D. 2008. European Spatial Planning Systems, Social Models, and Learning. The Planning Review, 44(1): 35-47.
Regions and Innovation: Collaborating across Borders. 2013. OECD Reviews of Regional Innovation, OECD Publishing.
Perkmann M., Sum N.L. 2002. Globalization, Regionalization and Cross-border Regions: Scales, Discourses and Governance. In: Globalization, Regionalization and Cross-Border Regions. Eds. M. Perkmann, N.L. Sum. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, p. 3-24.
Perkmann M. 2005. Cross-border Co-operation as a Policy Entrepreneurship: Explaining the Variable Success of European Cross-border Regions. CSGR Working Paper No. 166/05, Warwick.
Schymik C. 2011. Blueprint for a Macro-Region. EU Strategies for the Baltic Sea and Danube Regions.SWP Research Paper. Berlin: SWP.
Stead D. 2011. Policy and Planning Brief. European Macro-regional Strategies: Indications of Spatial Rescaling? Planning Theory and Practice, 12(1): 163-167.
Stead D. 2014. European Integration and Spatial Rescaling in the Baltic Region: Soft Spaces, Soft Planning and Soft Security. European Planning Studies, 22(4): 680-693.
Svensson B., Osthol A. 2001. From Government to Governance: Regional Partnerships in Sweden. Regional and Federal Studies, 11(2): 25- 42.
Department of Political Science, University of Bari Aldo Moro
Licencia
An Author declares that his paper has not been published before (under the same or another title, or is a part of another publication) and does not infringe copyrights of other persons**. At the same time, the Author transfers to the Publisher the exclusive right to publish and to circulate this work in print in the form of a non-serial journal publication and in a form of an electronic publication.
The journal is available on Creative Common license CC-BY-NC-ND