南東欧における下位地域協力の現状 (1996年~2004年)

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タイトル別名
  • Subregional Cooperation in South-Eastern Europe (1996-2004)
  • ミナミトウオウ ニ オケル カイ チイキ キョウリョク ノ ゲンジョウ 1996ネン 2004ネン

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Subregional cooperation in South-Eastern Europe, emanating from the region itself since 1980s and strongly promoted by such international community as the EU after the Dayton Peace Agreement (1995), contributes to the stability and security of the Euro-Atlantic area. There is a synergy between the subregional process and wider European integration. The purpose of this paper is to examine how internal regional initiatives have evolved and what direction they are most likely to take, and to explore the specific role of external initiatives to the region. The object of the first section is to give an up-to-date summary of what is known about the subregional cooperation in South-Eastern Europe. The following section 2 explains the history and legacy of region-building efforts in the region. The main subject of section 3 is economic and geopolitic strategic motivations of the countries of the region. The meeting of the foreign ministers of South-Eastern European countries in Sofia (1996) launched the process of comprehensive multilateral cooperation, described as the "South Eastern European Cooperation Process" or the "Sofia Process." The first summit of heads of state was organized in Crete in November 1997. In section 4, I consider the major functions of externally-driven regional approaches, such as Royaumont Process for Stability and Good Neighborliness in South-Eastern Europe based on EU initiative, Southeast European Cooperative Initiative led by United States of America, and the comprehensive framework based on the Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe (1999). And the last section 5 focuses on a recent multilateral cooperation process (Southeast European Co-operation Process) in the period from 1999 to 2004.

収録刊行物

  • 広島国際研究

    広島国際研究 10 1-23, 2004-11-30

    広島市立大学国際学部

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