The 27th NISPAcee Annual Conference

Conference photos available

Conference photos available

In the conference participated 317 participants

Conference programme published

Almost 250 conference participants from 36 countries participated

Conference Report

The 28th NISPAcee Annual Conference cancelled

The 29th NISPAcee Annual Conference, Ljubljana, Slovenia, October 21 - October 23, 2021

The 2020 NISPAcee On-line Conference

The 30th NISPAcee Annual Conference, Bucharest, Romania, June 2 - June 4, 2022

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...Sessions were interesting, scholars were engaging and all the social events were amazing!

B.K., Kazakhstan, 26th NISPAcee Annual Conference 2018, Iasi

Excellent organization, excellent food. Compliments to the organizers, they did a wonderful job!

V.J., Netherlands, 26th NISPAcee Annual Conference 2018, Iasi

...I must say that the PhD pre-conference seminar was the most useful seminar of my life. Very well...

K.V., Czech Republic, 26th NISPAcee Annual Conference 2018, Iasi

... I would even argue that they are the very best - both in terms of scientific content and also entertainment…

P.W., Denmark, 26th NISPAcee Annual Conference 2018, Iasi

An opportunity to learn from other researchers and other countries' experiences on certain topics.

G.A.C., Hungary, 25th Conference 2017, Kazan

Very well organised, excellent programme and fruitful discussions.

M.M.S., Slovakia, 25th Conference 2017, Kazan

The NISPAcee conference remains a very interesting conference.

M.D.V., Netherlands, 25th Conference 2017, Kazan

Thank you for the opportunity to be there, and for the work of the organisers.

D.Z., Hungary, 24th Conference 2016, Zagreb

Well organized, as always. Excellent conference topic and paper selection.

M.S., Serbia, 23rd Conference 2015, Georgia

Perfect conference. Well organised. Very informative.

M.deV., Netherlands, 22nd Conference 2014, Hungary

Excellent conference. Congratulations!

S. C., United States, 20th Conference 2012, Republic of Macedonia

Thanks for organising the pre-conference activity. I benefited significantly!

R. U., Uzbekistan, 19th Conference, Varna 2011

Each information I got, was received perfectly in time!

L. S., Latvia, 21st Conference 2013, Serbia

The Conference was very academically fruitful!

M. K., Republic of Macedonia, 20th Conference 2012, Republic of Macedonia

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 Paper/Speech Details of Conference Program  

for the  27th NISPAcee Annual Conference
  Program Overview
WG4: Inter-regional Cooperation and Development
Author(s)  Martina Eckardt 
  Andrássy University Budapest
Budapest  Hungary
Okruch Stefan, Szentivanyi Csilla,  
 
 Title  The EGTC as a new Tool for Inter-regional and Cross-border Cooperation – A Quantitative Analysis
File   Paper files are available only for conference participants, please login first. 
Presenter  Martina Eckardt
Abstract  
  
The European Grouping of Territorial Cooperation (EGTC) is a novel European legal tool for cross-border, interregional and transnational cooperation. Introduced in 2006, it allows cooperating regional authorities, associations or other public bodies from different nation states to establish a legal entity of its own. The EGTC is meant to improve the governance of territorial cooperation, thus having beneficial economic effects in dealing with cross-border challenges in a variety of policy fields. In this paper, we analyze in how far this legal instrument may contribute to interregional and cross-border development by using a novel data set at the regional level.
We first shortly present the evolution of the EGTC and analyze its institutional design from an economic perspective. We put a special focus on its contribution to internalizing spill-overs and both negative and positive externalities in cross border regions, thus contributing to territorial cohesion as well as economic and social development. In a second step, we provide an original dataset for 281 regions at the NUTS2 level to explore similarities and differences among regions where EGTCs are located. We take a first look at whether and in how far regions with and without EGTCs established on their territories differ in regard to territorial cohesion and economic development. After developing a set of testable hypotheses, we use our dataset to test whether observed differences in regions with and without EGTCs are statistically significant.