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European Union

[Stakeholder] A call for closer dialogue in the interest of patients

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 15:00
If innovators and legislators listen to each other, the EU's pharmaceutical reforms will transform patient care and improve the bloc's global competitiveness.
Categories: European Union

[Analysis] Poland's Tusk now faces greatest challenge of his career

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 14:46
Donald Tusk now faces the biggest challenge of his career: restoring the rule of law, safeguarding media freedom, keeping up election promises, and addressing the national debt.
Categories: European Union

Press release - EP TODAY

European Parliament - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 14:33
Monday, 16 October

Source : © European Union, 2023 - EP
Categories: European Union

[Opinion] EU's Mideast policy flip-flops means summit risks irrelevance

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 13:02
Repeated policy flip-flops and competing messaging by top EU officials over the last 10 days have already dealt a huge, possibly fatal, blow to the bloc's foreign policy credentials.
Categories: European Union

Press release - Press briefing on this week’s plenary session

European Parliament - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 11:03
The European Parliament’s spokesperson will hold a last-minute briefing on the 16-19 October plenary session today at 16.30.

Source : © European Union, 2023 - EP
Categories: European Union

Kaczyński loses grip on Poland after eight years

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 10:51
Poland's nationalist-populist rulers lost twice over — in elections and in an anti-migrant referendum — on Sunday.
Categories: European Union

[Opinion] Time to recalibrate EU's partisan position on Israel/Palestine

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 10:36
Considering the many missed opportunities to hold Israel accountable for its violations and pursue a real peace process, the ongoing events should be a wakeup call for the EU to adherence to core values of human rights and democracy.
Categories: European Union

[Interview] Q&A: EU regions' champions lay out vision

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 10:11
The European Free Alliance (EFA) chose Raül Romeva, 52, and Maylis Roßberg, 23, as its leading candidates for the 2024 EU elections. EUobserver sat down with both to discuss the Europe they envision for the next mandate.
Categories: European Union

[Agenda] Hamas-Israel war and EU-US summit in focus This WEEK

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 07:25
In the wake of the shocking terrorist attack of Hamas in Israel and the Israeli brutal response in Gaza, EU leaders will hold an emergency meeting via video conference this week. The EU-US summit will take place on Friday.
Categories: European Union

Catalan separatist in next year's EU election race

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 07:20
The European Free Alliance political party has chosen its top two candidates for the EU elections, aiming to speak up for "all" regions, minorities, and citizens.
Categories: European Union

Tunisia's medicine shortages drive people to Europe for drugs

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 07:00
Tunisia's public services — starting with healthcare — are imploding due to a lack of financing. On Facebook groups of Tunisians abroad or Europeans living in Tunisia, requests for medicines are increasingly common.
Categories: European Union

[Opinion] Can Europe still contribute to peace in Niger?

Euobserver.com - Mon, 16/10/2023 - 06:59
After the French troop withdrawal, European partners can and should still play a supporting role in Niger. But it's crucial that this role is characterised by humility and inclusivity.
Categories: European Union

Study - Cross-border claims to looted art - PE 754.126 - Committee on Legal Affairs - Subcommittee on Human Rights - Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection - Committee on Foreign Affairs - Committee on Culture and Education

This study addresses cross-border restitution claims to looted art, considering Nazi-looted art and colonial takings, but also more recent cultural losses resulting from illicit trafficking. Although these categories differ considerably, commonalties exist. The study highlights blind spots in the legal and policy frameworks and formulates recommendations on how these could be bridged. This study was commissioned by the European Parliament’s Policy Department for Citizens’ Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the request of the JURI Committee.
Source : © European Union, 2023 - EP
Categories: European Union

EU calls Gaza-war summit, triples aid to Palestinians

Euobserver.com - Sun, 15/10/2023 - 14:15
EU leaders are to hold emergency talks by video-link, as EU commission said it was tripling Palestine's humanitarian aid.
Categories: European Union

Borrell: Israel's 24hr-Gaza ultimatum 'utterly unrealistic'

Euobserver.com - Fri, 13/10/2023 - 15:56
Over one million people cannot in reality leave Gaza City overnight in line with Israel's order, the EU's top diplomat has said.
Categories: European Union

Agenda - The Week Ahead 16 – 22 October 2023

European Parliament - Fri, 13/10/2023 - 13:33
Plenary session Strasbourg

Source : © European Union, 2023 - EP
Categories: European Union

[Opinion] Did Hamas time attack to torpedo Israel-Saudi deal?

Euobserver.com - Fri, 13/10/2023 - 12:39
The fact that three of Iran's enemies — the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia —would form an alliance will have set off alarm bells in Tehran. For Hamas, too, such an agreement goes against everything it stands for.
Categories: European Union

The UK’s Association to EU Programmes

Ideas on Europe Blog - Fri, 13/10/2023 - 12:01
For our weekly editorial by UACES on euradio, the University Association for Contemporary European Studies, we have the pleasure to welcome Dr Cleo Davies, from the University of Warwick, in the United Kingdom. Listen to the podcast on eu!radio.

 

 

 

 

Earlier this month, on 7 September, it was announced that the United Kingdom finally joined the European research programme “HORIZON” again.

That’s right. The UK becomes the seventeenth non-EU member state country to be associated to the EU’s flagship funding programme for research and innovation, alongside countries like Israel, Norway, Türkiye, Tunisia and Ukraine. With negotiations either finalised or ongoing with New Zealand, South Korea, Canada and Morocco amongst others, the UK’s research institutions and researchers are being plugged back into the world’s largest research programme.

 

So that puts an end to an uncertainty which lasted three years.

It’s because the UK’s continued association post-EU membership got entangled in the politics of Brexit.

Participation in Union Programmes was negotiated in 2020 as part of the future UK-EU relationship and included in the “TCA”, the “Trade and Cooperation Agreement”. It was not a sticking point during the negotiations. But whilst the terms of participation were agreed in the TCA, the details were not adopted because the EU only agreed in December 2020 on its Multiannual Financial Framework, and had not yet finalised the programme’s legal framework. Instead, two draft protocols were part of a Declaration attached to the TCA in which both parties stated their ‘ambition that UK entities would be able to participate from the beginning of the programmes’.

 

But that was not the case.

No. When in March 2021, the UK government announced the extension of grace periods under the Protocol on Ireland and Northern Ireland, in a unilateral move and without first informing its European counterpart via the governance structures of the Withdrawal Agreement, levels of trust between the EU and the UK reached a new low point. The EU looked for ways to apply pressure. It took the decision to halt progress on finalising the provisions for association to Union programmes, in spite of its own interests. Indeed, not only were UK research institutions major partners for EU-based institutes, but fragmenting research capacity also goes against the very purpose and principles of Horizon Europe.

Nevertheless, to ensure continuity and avoid uncertainty, UK research institutions and researchers were able to apply to the first calls under Horizon Europe. Furthermore, the UK government launched the Horizon Europe Guarantee in November 2021 to plug the gap in funding for successful bids in the first wave of calls.

 

Did the famous Windsor Framework, signed earlier this year, have an impact on the situation?

It certainly broke the deadlock in EU-UK relations, also paving the way for a resolution on the UK’s association to Union Programmes. But it took another six months.

Once again, the politics of Brexit threatened to derail finalising the UK’s participation in Union programmes.

In April, just as discussions had resumed, the UK government published its provisions for an alternative to the UK’s association to Horizon Europe, the so-called Pioneer Prospectus. With the UK concerned to secure ‘value-for-money’, Brussels was getting weary over the UK’s perceived attempts to renegotiate terms agreed in the TCA. In July 2023, amid rumours that a deal with the EU had been agreed, Rishi Sunak delayed his decision further, weighing the pros and cons of the UK’s alternative. Had the Pioneer Prospectus been rolled out, it would have set the UK on a different path and made association to the EU programme less likely.

 

So what does this all mean concretely?

The UK joins Horizon Europe and the Copernicus Programme. It will have access to EU Space Surveillance and Tracking services. UK researchers will be able to access Horizon Europe funding from 2024 work programmes and onwards until 2027. They will be hoping that by then, UK-EU relations will have further normalised, avoiding any future prospect of a repeat of the delays and uncertainty of the past two and a half years.

 

Interview conducted Laurence Aubron

The post The UK’s Association to EU Programmes appeared first on Ideas on Europe.

Categories: European Union

Erdoğan lashes out at ECHR's landmark 'anti-Turkey' ruling

Euobserver.com - Fri, 13/10/2023 - 12:00
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan paved the way for a new clash between Brussels and Ankara by challenging the authority of the European Court of Human Rights, after a landmark ruling against the detention of a teacher imprisoned after the 2016 coup.
Categories: European Union

Exiled Saudi dissident in Bulgaria ensnared in asylum legal limbo

Euobserver.com - Fri, 13/10/2023 - 11:24
A recent decision on a detained Saudi dissident by Bulgaria's supreme administrative court has cast a long shadow over the legal system for people seeking asylum there.
Categories: European Union

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