Skip to main content

IMIS

A new integrated search interface will become available in the next phase of marineinfo.org.
For the time being, please use IMIS to search available data

 

[ report an error in this record ]basket (1): add | show Print this page

one publication added to basket [396156]
Re-thinking regions: a citizen perspective (Tenth anniversary special issue)
Koff, H.; Maganda, C.; De Lombaerde, P.; Kauffer, E.; Ros Cuellar, J. (Ed.) (2020). Re-thinking regions: a citizen perspective (Tenth anniversary special issue). Regions & cohesion: the journal of the Consortium for Comparative Research on Regional Integration and Social Cohesion, 10(3). Berghahn Journals: New York. v-163 pp.
Part of: Regions & cohesion: the journal of the Consortium for Comparative Research on Regional Integration and Social Cohesion. Berghahn Journals: New York. ISSN 2152-9078; e-ISSN 2152-906X, more
Peer reviewed article  

Authors  Top 
  • Koff, H., editor
  • Maganda, C., editor, more
  • De Lombaerde, P., editor
  • Kauffer, E., editor
  • Ros Cuellar, J., editor

Content
  • Šime, Z. (2020). EU strategy for the Baltic Sea region: A new space for a study of novel forms of diplomacy, in: Koff, H. et al. Re-thinking regions: a citizen perspective (Tenth anniversary special issue). Regions & cohesion: the journal of the Consortium for Comparative Research on Regional Integration and Social Cohesion, 10(3): pp. 108-124. https://dx.doi.org/10.3167/reco.2020.100310, more

Abstract
    The year 2020 has been challenging due to the different overlapping crises related to the COVID-19 pandemic. It is difficult to celebrate amidst the awareness of the worst global suffering in generations. Nonetheless, we consider ourselves extremely fortunate to commemorate ten years of Regions & Cohesion. It is not lost on us that our commemoration occurs amidst the above-cited crises. The inaugural issue of Regions & Cohesion(2011) was entitled “Regiones, régions, regions, everywhere. . . . But what about the people?” It noted that regional integration had proliferated throughout the 1990s and early 2000s to the point that some scholarship was suggesting that regions could one day substitute nation-states as prominent actors in global affairs. The opening editorial of this issue noted that successful region-building, at the supranational, transnational, and sub-national level was measured in terms of economic prosperity and political stability. The inaugural issue questioned this approach by studying how well regions respond to the needs of citizens. It asked whether regions serve the needs of their people or whether people serve the needs of regional economies. The coronavirus-related crises have merely emphasized many of the shortcomings of regions and regionalisms that this journal has documented throughout its first decade of existence.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Authors