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Out now: Border Futures – Zukunft Grenze – Avenir Frontière.

This working report "Border Futures – Zukunft Grenze – Avenir Frontière. The future viability of cross-border cooperation." edited by  Karina Pallagst, Andrea Hartz and Beate Caesar is a translated version of the Arbeitsbericht 20 focussing on the following questions:

What current discourses are relevant for border areas? What opportunities for and obstacles to integrated territorial development arise from the specific situation of border regions? How can these be utilised or overcome in a goal-oriented way?

These questions were central to the discussions of the Border Futures working group. Border regions like the Greater Region Saarland – Lorraine – Luxembourg – Rhineland-Palatinate – Walloon Region – the French Community of Belgium and the German-speaking Community of Belgium or the Trinational Metropolitan Region of the Upper Rhine extend far beyond the immediate border area. While institutional structures of cooperation can be perpetuated through agreements and organisations, there is a lack of instruments which cross-border cooperation structures can deploy in response to changing situations. Cross-border cooperation faces new challenges from increasing cross-border interactions, processes of economic structural transformation, new energy policies in the national sub-spaces, and demographic change. Another factor is increasing spatial polarisation, which influences the further development and future viability of the affected border areas, and involves metropolisation issues in urban centres and the provision of public services in rural districts. Building on discussions of the Border Futures working group, this volume sheds light on cross-border cooperation in practice with recent research relevant to planning in border regions in the European context.

The working report 33 is Open Access available.