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Think Tank Forum - July 3

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Meetings of experts in the Think Tank Forum format were initiated during the Polish presidency of the Berlin Process. On the one hand, this cooperation platform provides important concrete support for Poland as the host of the Western Balkans Summit. On the other, it supports cooperation between expert and non-governmental organisations in the countries of the EU and the Western Balkans. Within the Berlin Process experts circles are tasked with monitoring the implementation of commitments made by the Balkan states. They are further tasked with preparing analyses and recommendations ahead of meetings at the political level. The development of cooperation among expert groups serves to elaborate common proposals of solutions to the crucial problems of the region. The inclusion of experts from the Western Balkans in the network of analytical organisations from the EU makes it possible for a mutual increase in competences. It also enables experience and information exchange.

One essential goal of the Think Tank Forum meetings is to discuss the achievements and challenges facing the new European Commission linked to the EU’s enlargement policy and the development of the Berlin Process.

The first expert conference of the Think Tank Forum took place on 13th-14th May in Skopje. The Centre for Eastern Studies (OSW) and the Institute for Democracy Societas Civilis Skopje (IDSCS) in collaboration with the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs organised a conference entitled, ‘Reinforcing the European Integration of the Western Balkans – Learning from the Past, Preparing for the Future’. The plenary session was focused on the experiences of Central European countries with integration, the EU’s internal challenges, and the future of enlargement policy. The issues discussed in a series of round tables debates include: security, the construction of democratic institutions in a region resistant to outside influence, and solving bilateral conflicts.

The second edition of the Think Tank Forum will take place on the 3rd July and will be devoted to evaluating what the Berlin Process has achieved to date in socio-economic terms. There will also be a discussion about recommendations on how to increase the efficiency of enlargement policy and the instruments of the Berlin Process. The first panel will discuss regional cooperation towards the economic integration of the Balkan states in infrastructural terms, and how to increase trade. The second session will cover social-economic issues and the main challenges hampering regional development, such as problems with the functioning of the rule of law. The third session will see broader reflection from Balkans experts on the effectiveness of the current EU policy on the region and of initiatives undertaken as part of the Berlin Process. Proposals will be presented to make the EU’s activity more effective, to accelerate the social-economic transformation and the region’s integration with the EU. Recommendations resulting from the debates will be presented during the ministerial meetings accompanying the Western Balkans Summit in Poznań.

Associated event:

The cooperation of Visegrad countries and Western Balkan countries as part of the Berlin Process and preparations to the Poznań summit was also a topic at the annual Think Visegrad conference, which this year took place in Bratislava on 27th-28th May. It was organised by the Slovak Foreign Policy Association (SFPA) and was attended by representatives of think tanks from countries of the Visegrad Group and the Balkans. The conclusions of the meetings were communicated to the foreign ministers of the Visegrad and Western Balkan countries who were attending a parallel meeting in Bratislava organised as part of Slovakia’s presidency of the Visegrad Group.

Prepared by: Center for Eastern Studies 
 

Materials

Programme
Think​_Tank​_Forum,​_Civil​_Society​_Forum​_and​_Business​_Forum​_Programme​_.pdf 1.16MB
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