ABSTRACT

European macro-regions, Euroregions and other forms of inter-regional, cross-border cooperation have helped to shape new scenarios and new relational spaces which may generate opportunities for economic development, while redefining the political and economic meaning of national borders. This book is based on a number of key case studies which are crucial to understanding the complex web of political, economic and cultural factors that shape the heterogeneous picture of Europe’s new geography.

This book provides a fresh view on this phenomenon, with a realistic approach shedding light on its complexity as well as on its ambiguities. The new macro-regions are interpreted with an approach recognizing the importance of institutionalization, but also their flexible configuration and "blurred" borders. The book also raises the issue of credibility and legitimacy, arguing that inter-regional cooperation has to be removed from the foggy realm of the exchanges between local political and bureaucratic elites in order to be clearly and concretely motivated, and functional to key strategic objectives of the regions. Finally, the authors suggest a complementarity between relations based on proximity and wider (possibly global) networks where some territories, and especially metropolises, find opportunities based on "virtual" proximity.

Europe's Changing Geography provides a substantial re-appraisal of a key phenomenon in the process of European integration today. It will be of interest both to scholars of the political economy of European regionalism and to practitioners.

part I|27 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

Europe's changing regional geography

The impact of inter-regional networks

part II|35 pages

New challenges and new patterns of collaboration

chapter 2|33 pages

European macro-regions as a new dimension of European geography

Networks of collaboration in the light of culture, history and language capabilities

part III|59 pages

Europe's new regionalization

chapter 3|14 pages

The Baltic Sea region

Who cooperates with whom, and why?

chapter 4|20 pages

Towards a ‘wide area cooperation'

The economic rationale and political feasibility of the Adriatic Euroregion

chapter 5|23 pages

A typology of agents and subjects of regional cooperation

The experience of the Mediterranean Arc

part IV|65 pages

Europe's re-regionalization across borders

part V|12 pages

Conclusions