Category
page 1Euroregions
Euroregion
In European politics, the term Euroregion usually refers to a transnational co-operation structure between two (or more) contiguous territories located in different European countries. Euroregions represent a specific type of cross-border region.
Greater Region
euroregion in Western Europe
Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino Euroregion
Euroregion formed by three different regional authorities in Austria and Italy
European economic interest grouping
type of legal entity of the European corporate law
European grouping of territorial cooperation
organization type and legal form in the European Union
Alps–Mediterranean Euroregion
Euroregion in France and Italy
Euregio Meuse-Rhine
euregio in Belgium, Germany and Netherlands
Neisse Euroregion
Euroregion of Czechia, Germany, and Poland
Adriatic Ionian Euroregion
Euroregion of 6 countries bordering the Adriatic Sea and Ionian Sea
Talsinki
thumb|A map of the assessed tunnel routes between Tallinn and Helsinki
Talsinki (sometimes also Hellinna or Hellinn) is a colloquial name for the geographical region of Helsinki, Finland, and Tallinn, Estonia, separated by the Gulf of Finland, commonly used when referring to the proposed Helsinki–Tallinn Tunnel. The official Euroregion name for the region is Helsinki–Tallinn Euregion.
Euregio
EUREGIO is a cross-border region between the Netherlands and Germany and the first Euroregion. It was founded in 1958 as a German Eingetragener Verein, and has been converted in 2016 into a public body based on the 1991 Treaty of Anholt (, ). Participating communities are in Niedersachsen (Osnabrück, Landkreis Osnabrück, southern part of Landkreis Emsland, Bentheim) and Nordrhein-Westfalen (Münsterland) in Germany and parts of the Dutch provinces Gelderland, Overijssel and Drenthe. Participating cities in the region are Münster, Osnabrück, Gronau, Enschede, and Hengelo. The headquarters of the
Pyrenees–Mediterranean Euroregion
political cooperation organisation
Galicia–North Portugal Euroregion
Baltic Euroregion
Euroregion of Denmark, Lithuania, Poland, Russia and Sweden