Mechanism to resolve legal and administrative obstacles in a cross-border context
Often isolated, and with generally poorer access to public services, the EU's border regions face a unique set of challenges. This has been recognised under Article 174 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, which provides that particular attention should be paid to cross-border regions when developing action to strengthen the EU's economic, social and territorial cohesion. Yet while the EU has provided significant support over the years, particularly within the framework of European territorial cooperation, helping to strengthen connectivity and create new growth and jobs, numerous obstacles continue to hamper cross-border cooperation. The Commission's 2015 cross-border review revealed legal and administrative barriers to be the main obstacle to cross-border cooperation while, in parallel, the 2015 Luxembourg Presidency put forward plans for an EU cross-border mechanism, with both processes feeding into discussions on a mechanism for cross-border areas, culminating in the present proposal. The EP adopted its first-reading position on the proposal in February 2019, yet progress has been slow, with the Council's Working Party on Structural Measures deciding to cease work on the proposal in May 2021.
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Publication type
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Policy area
Keyword
- administrative cooperation
- cooperation policy
- cross-border cooperation
- economic and social cohesion
- economic geography
- ECONOMICS
- EP Committee
- EU institutions and European civil service
- EU Member State
- EU regional policy
- European construction
- EUROPEAN UNION
- European Union law
- executive power and public service
- frontier region
- GEOGRAPHY
- INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- legal cooperation
- POLITICS
- proposal (EU)
- regional cooperation
- regional development
- regional disparity
- regions and regional policy