Critical Dictionary on Borders, Cross-Border Cooperation and European Integration

Critical Dictionary on Borders, Cross-Border Cooperation and European Integration

Border Region
Europe
Language(s)
Anglais
Introduction

Borders are a central issue of the European Union (EU):  But how do we really understand the role of borders in European Integration and how does cross-border cooperation function in the different EU border regions? The dictionary presents its main players, their motives, objectives and tools.

Summary

This Critical Dictionary on Borders, Cross-Border Cooperation and European Integration takes up the challenge to answer these questions. It is the first encyclopedia, which combines two so far not well-interconnected interdisciplinary research fields, i.e. Border Studies and European Studies. Organized in an alphabetical order, it contains 209 articles written by 124 authors from different countries and scientific disciplines, which are accompanied by 66 maps. The articles deal with theory, terminology, concepts, actors, themes and spaces of cross-border cooperation at European borders and in borderlands of and around the European Union (EU).

Content

Taking into account a multi-scale perspective from the local to the global, the Critical Dictionary follows a combined historical-geographical approach. It fills a gap in the scientific literature on Border- and European Studies and pursues three main objectives: First, it establishes a link between the two (as of yet) still relatively unconnected disciplines. Second, it provides an interdisciplinary tool for students, researchers, and practitioners, through an overview of theory, terms, forms, actors, and tools of territorial cooperation in Europe. Third, it challenges the traditional top-down approach to European integration by taking into account not only European Union (EU) institutions and Member States, but the links that these institutions and actors have to the multitude of local and regional initiatives, which have thus far fed into the process of European integration. It is therefore a first step towards a new decentralized, territorialized approach to European integration; one that looks at integration as a mosaic of bottom-up processes identified by starting from the local and regional level of Europe’s borderlands. The book is organized by means of key words classified in alphabetical order. For the conceptual section, the authors were asked to analyse each term according to a fixed scheme, which includes an explication of the notion, connected terms, issues, and bibliographical references (among others). The geographical section consists of articles on border spaces in the EU and companion maps, which together present an analysis of the borders as a whole by distinguishing between the constructions of the cross-border territory, the representations of the border and the general history and governance of cross-border cooperation. For the authors of this collective publication, the focus has always been on the fact that we are dealing with a “critical” dictionary, which means that there is no request for uniform thinking. Quite on the contrary, we invited them to give their subjective analysis of a given term or area to further stimulate interdisciplinary research and discussion. All articles have also been subject of a peer-review system ensuring scientific discussion and quality checks before publication. The Critical Dictionary is part of four Jean Monnet activities supported by the EU Erasmus+ program for the period 2016-2023: two Jean Monnet projects on EU border regions, a Jean Monnet network (Frontem) and the Franco-German Jean Monnet excellence Center (University of Strasbourg), as well as the Jean Monnet Chair of Bernard Reitel on borders and European integration (University d’Artois)

Conclusions

The Critical Dictionary is a first step to a new, territorialized approach to European integration. This approach uses a geographic-historical methodology to describe a more decentralized history of small areas of integration in border regions. This approach reconstructs the historical development of multiple areas of local cooperation to reinterpret them in the context of European integration. Like a mosaic, which is constituted like a puzzle with the whole formed from a large number of individual pieces, this ‘mosaic’ method is inspired by the Holberg Prize Symposium in 2010 on Doing Decentered History: The Global in the Local, where several researchers presented their decentralized approach to global history. The outcome of this innovative approach to the history of European integration is a new focus on the role of borders and border regions. The Critical Dictionary thus considers the multiple functions that the border takes on with regard to both their positive and negative impacts on European integration. It leads us away from an overly one-sided, positivist approach to cross-border cooperation as a necessary contribution to European integration and re-establishes cross-border cooperation as a specific branch of Border Studies, which may help to explain the process of integration in Europe, but also processes of European disintegration. From a geographical point of view, the Critical Dictionary allows for a visualization of cross-border cooperation throughout the EU and its surroundings. Even when one has a detailed map of a cross-border region, comparisons between them can sometimes prove difficult, as semiotic choices are not identical from one region to another. A harmonized legend has been created at the European level to allow for such a comparative analysis. It takes into account two geographical dimensions: scale on the one hand and population on the other. Three spatial scales are thus represented: supra-regional, regional and local.

Key Messages

The Critical Dictionary is a good starting point for the work on the future of European Territorial Cooperation, which in the past thirty years has been essential in supporting cross-border cooperation across Europe. It is not only essential reading for practitioners and experts in cross-border cooperation, but also for students who wish to pursue their career in this area and who want to shape the Europe of tomorrow. It should be regarded as an ongoing process rather than a final product, which serves as a critical tool for discussion in the field of borders, cross-border cooperation and European Integration.

Lead

Birte Wassenberg, Université de Strasbourg & Bernard Reitel, Université d’Artois

Author of the entry
Contributions

Université de Strasbourg

UMR Dyname

UR Discontinuités

Mission opérationnelle transfrontalière (MOT)

Transfrontier Euro-Institute Network (TEIN)

Contact Person(s)
Date of creation
2021
Publisher
Peter Lang, collection Border Studies and European Integration
Identifier

DOI : 10.3726/b15774
ISBN 978-2-8076-0792-7
ISNN 2736-2450