6533b823fe1ef96bd127ed41

RESEARCH PRODUCT

‘Experimental Union’ and Baltic Sea cooperation: the case of the European Union’s Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region (EUSBSR)

Stefan Gänzle

subject

Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political ScienceRange (biology)Good Environmental StatusGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologiesPolicy objectives02 engineering and technologyInternational tradelcsh:Regional economics. Space in economicslcsh:Regional planningBaltic Sea cooperationEuropean Territorial Cooperation (ETC)European Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region (EUSBSR)050602 political science & public administrationmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean UnionEuropean unionmedia_commonbusiness.industry05 social scienceslcsh:HT390-395021107 urban & regional planningEuropean Union macro-regional strategieslcsh:HT3880506 political scienceCohesion PolicyGeographyBaltic seatransnational and regional cooperationgovernance architectureexperimentalist governancebusiness

description

In the past, Baltic Sea cooperation has been characterized by a plethora of actors, embracing a wide range of policy objectives, such as the establishment of a good environmental status for the regional sea. In 2009, the European Council endorsed the European Union’s (EU) Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region (EUSBSR) as a new tool in the repertoire of Cohesion Policy and European Territorial Cooperation (ETC). The EUSBSR seeks to foster cross-sectoral coordination and functional cooperation in policy areas of ‘macro-region-level’ relevance, such as transport infrastructure, economic development and environmental protection – thus projecting a ‘soft space’ of transnational Baltic Sea cooperation. Although firmly placed under the so-called ‘Three No’s’, that is, the requirement of no additional EU funding, institutions and legislation, a lean governance architecture at the macro-regional level has emerged over time and the strategy mobilizes actors from all tenets of the EU’s multilevel governance system, including the EU itself, its member and adjacent partner states, as well as subnational authorities and civil society. Drawing on the lens of experimentalist governance, this paper analyzes the underlying mechanisms that allow it to be gauged to what extent the Baltic Sea ‘soft space’ has solidified over the past decade. It also shows that the EUSBSR effectively rebalances EU transnational and intergovernmental regional cooperation in the Baltic macro-region.

10.1080/21681376.2018.1532315http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2599348