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Urban Studies, Vol. 33, No. 8, 1297-1318 (1996)
DOI: 10.1080/0042098966664
© 1996 Urban Studies Journal Limited

Urban Power, International Networks and Competition: The Example of Cross-border Cooperation

Andrew Church

Department of Geography, Birkbeck College, University of London, 7-15 Gresse Street, London W1P 1PA, UK, ANDREW{at}geog.canterbury.ac.n

Peter Reid

5 Netley Close, Vinters Park, Maidstone, Kent, ME14 5SA

The involvement of urban and regional governments in transnational cooperative arrangements and policy networks has led to considerable debate regarding the political and theoretical implications. This paper examines networking and cooperation between urban areas and regions in the UK and France with a shared sea border. Such cross-border cooperation involving local authorities in Europe is a growing phenomenon and has certain implications for the analysis of local and urban politics. Three study areas are examined in detail: the Transmanche region involving Kent County Council and the French region Nord-Pas-de-Calais; the Transmanche Metropole which includes Southampton, Portsmouth, Bournemouth and Poole in Britain and Caen, Rouen and Le Havre in France; the cooperative initiative between the English county of East Sussex and the French departements of Somme and Seine-Maritime. In all three case studies, the development of cooperation has been influenced by the availability of funds from the European Union Interreg programme which supports transfrontier networking. A number of political consequences of cross-border cooperation are identified. The implications of these policy initiatives for theories of urban politics are considered, including a discussion of the political and economic construction of competition and cooperation between cities and regions.


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European Urban and Regional StudiesHome page
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[Abstract] [PDF]