Guajara in other languages: Spanish, Deutsch, French, Italian ...



Euroregion

In European politics, a Euroregion is a form of transfrontier co-operation structure between two (or more) European countries. Euroregions usually do not correspond to any legislative or governmental institution, do not have political power and their work is limited to the competences of the local and regional authorities which constitute them. They are usually arranged to promote common interests across the border and cooperate for the common good of the border populations. Although the term "euroregion" means a similar thing, it should not be confused with ordinary regions in Europe.

Table of contents
1 Criteria for Euroregions
2 Naming conventions
3 See also
4 External links

Criteria for Euroregions

The Association of European Border Regions sets the following criteria for the identification of euroregions [1]:

It is difficult to assiciate one legal framework to the term "euroregion", as they operate across country borders and vary widely in their particular forms.

Naming conventions

The naming convention for euroregions is as varied as the forms of the regions themselves. The most common local names for a euroregion include: euregio, euregion, euroregion, europaregion, grand region, regio or council.

See also

External links

Pages at the Council of Europe




Wikipedia - All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

Tagoror dot com  -  Legal Information  -  Contact us