Place:Assembly of European Regions
Template:Infobox Geopolitical organisation
The Assembly of European Regions (AER) is the largest independent network of regions in wider Europe. Bringing together regions from 35 countries and 15 interregional organizations, AER is a forum for interregional cooperation.[1]
Historical background
On 15 June 1985, at Louvain-la-Neuve (Walloon Brabant), 47 Regions and 9 interregional organizations founded the Council of the Regions of Europe (CRE), which would later become the Assembly of European Regions in November 1987 at the second General meeting of the Regions of Europe in Brussels.
The year 1985 was proclaimed by the United Nations as the International Youth Year. The same year AER launched its first programme, Eurodyssey, designed to promote and encourage youth mobility.
In 1990, AER's Tabula Regionum Europae published the first map of its kind citing a Europe made up of regions and not simply of countries. The year after, the principle of subsidiarity became the leading AER campaign to promote the role of regions in all European and national decision-making processes. Soon thereafter its success was to be evident as the principle was recognized in the Maastricht Treaty of 1992.
The creation of the Committee of the Regions (CoR) in 1994 and the Chamber of the Regions in the framework of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of Europe (CLRAE) in 1994, exemplified a victory for AER in advocating for the regions in Europe.
In 1995, AER launched a campaign to promote regionalism in Europe. As a result, 300 AER members adopted in 1996 the Declaration on Regionalism in Europe immediately initializing a reference document for new and developing regions.[1]
In 2002, AER presented its position on the “Future of Europe” to the European Convention. AER actively contributed to the drafting of the European Constitution, demonstrating strong political involvement. The final text included all AER proposals, namely
- The recognition of the regions as an important level of governance within Europe.
- The extension of the principle of subsidiarity to regional and local levels.
- The inclusion of regional cohesion in EU's objectives.
In 2008, AER established the Youth Regional Network, Europe's first and only platform of regional youth councils, parliaments and organisations.
Definition of "Region"
According to the AER statutes, in principle the term "region" refers to a territorial authority existing at the level immediately below that of the central government, with its own political representation in the form of an elected regional assembly.
Members
Member regions of the Assembly of European Regions come from the following countries:[2]
- Albania
- Armenia
- Austria
- Belgium
- Croatia
- Cyprus
- Denmark
- Finland
- France
- Georgia
- Hungary
- Ireland
- Italy
- Montenegro
- Netherlands
- Norway
- Portugal
- Romania
- Russia
- Serbia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
List of presidents of the AER
- Albert Castellanos (Spain) - 2023–present
- Magnus Berntsson - Västra Götaland (Sweden) - 2017–2023
- Hande Özsan Bozatlı - Istanbul (Turkey) - 2013–2017
- Michèle Sabban - Île-de-France (France) - 2008–2013
- Riccardo Illy - Friuli-Venezia-Giulia (Italy) - 2004–2008
- Liese Prokop - Lower Austria (Austria) - 2000–2004
- Luc Van den Brande - Flanders (Belgium) - 1996–2000
- Jordi Pujol - Catalonia (Spain) - 1992-1996
- Carlo Bernini - Veneto (Italy) - 1988–1992
- Edgar Faure - Franche-Comté (France) - 1985–1988
See also
- European integration
- Regions of Europe
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "The European Task Force on Culture and Development". Council of Europe Publishing. https://rm.coe.int/0900001680085bfc.
- ↑ "Members and Partners Directory". https://aer.eu/directory/.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assembly of European Regions.
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