EU Accession Archives - CDINSTITUTE https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/tag/eu-accession/ Wed, 02 Jun 2021 09:49:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/cropped-logo-cdi-e1564147973484-32x32.png EU Accession Archives - CDINSTITUTE https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/tag/eu-accession/ 32 32 Shaping the Future in Albania: Civil society’s questions and answers to current issues https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2014/12/08/shaping-the-future-in-albania-civil-societys-questions-and-answers-to-current-issues/ Mon, 08 Dec 2014 12:18:42 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/NEW/?p=1438 The post Shaping the Future in Albania: Civil society’s questions and answers to current issues appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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December 2014

Shaping the Future in Albania: Civil society’s questions and answers to current issues

Conference Report

Cooperation and Development Institute participated in the workshop “Shaping the future of Albania” organized by the Southeast Europe Association (Südosteuropa-Gesellschaft) civil society activists from Albania – journalists, academics, young generation politicians and officials from administration – as well as German and international stakeholders – met in Munich.

They held a dialogue on Albania and its future under Chatham House Rules, looking for answers to the current issues surrounding Albania’s civil society and defining additional questions. The problems that persistently came up in the workshop, whatever the context, were those of EU membership perspectives, of persuasive corruption, of the lack of the rule of law, the need for reform, the question of Albanian nationalism and of economic development.

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Internal Democracy in Albanian Political Parties https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2015/10/14/internal-democracy-in-albanian-political-parties/ Wed, 14 Oct 2015 10:15:22 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/NEW/?p=1400 The post Internal Democracy in Albanian Political Parties appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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2015

 Internal Democracy in Albanian Political Parties

Policy study

The present study is part of a set of studies about the actors in the Albanian democracy. At the beginning of the year 2014 the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung brought into life, together with leading experts of six distinguished organizations and Think Tanks, a long term project. The aim of this project is to create and stimulate a political and social discussion in Albania about the EU Integration.

The starting point of the contemplation was the perspective that Albania desires to be soon a full EU member, with an economic and social developed society. More than 80% of the population aims at this goal. To reach it Albania must fulfil, inter alia, the minimum social standards of the EU ─ the so called European Social Model (ESM). These standards can only be reached if all involved parties of the society along with politics and administration act jointly, namely that they foster a trusting and cooperating relationship between each other.

The project is mainly activated by how far the named actors in this society are ready to get involved in the public with their claims and wishes, their visions and fears. From this point of view, the project will accompany the Albanian politics for a little while on their way to the EU and will support them.

To read this study in Albanian language, click here.

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Democracy in Progress: Shadow Report on Political Copenhagen Criteria in Western Balkans EU Candidate States https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2017/12/23/democracy-in-progress-shadow-report-on-political-copenhagen-criteria-in-western-balkans-eu-candidate-states/ Sat, 23 Dec 2017 12:00:22 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/NEW/?p=1999 The post Democracy in Progress: Shadow Report on Political Copenhagen Criteria in Western Balkans EU Candidate States appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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December 2017

Democracy in Progress Shadow Report on Political Copenhagen criteria in Western Balkans EU Candidate States

Report

European Union, Eu accession , Western Balkans

The goal of this publication is to provide an overview of the state of democracy in all four EU membership candidate countries in the Western Balkans – Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Albania. To achieve this, the publication presents a “shadow report” on some of the key Copenhagen criteria – democracy, freedom of expression and regional issues and international obligations, as presented within the original country reports.

The report covers the period from November 2016 to October 2017, with the exception of Montenegro, where October 2016 was also included due to the importance of the parliamentary elections and the consequences they had for democracy in the country.

This publication represents a cooperation between the Centre for Contemporary Politics from Belgrade and the Cooperation and Development Institute from Tirana, published with the support of the European Fund for the Balkans through the Think and Link Regional Policy Programme.

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Frontloading Conditionality: The EU Council Track Record Table for Albania https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2020/04/21/frontloading-conditionality-the-eu-council-track-record-table-for-albania/ Tue, 21 Apr 2020 14:19:36 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/web/?p=4761 The post Frontloading Conditionality: The EU Council Track Record Table for Albania appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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2020

Frontloading Conditionality: The EU Council Track Record Table for Albania

REPORT

The aim of this track record table is to present the main conditions set by the EU Council during the past years regarding opening the negotiation talks with Albania. The information for the EU Council track record table has been drawn from the decision of the EU Council of Ministers of June 2018, of June 2019 and of October 2019, and of March 2020. CDI’s research team and its experts have done the classification and slightly modified the language to adapt to the table format.

This document is a product of the project “Preparing and Supporting Albania for EU Accession Process – ALBE”, implemented by Cooperation and Development Institute and supported by the Embassy of the Netherlands in Albania in Tirana.

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EU Enlargement in SEE6 and Country Reforms: The Justice Reform in Albania as a Case Study https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2020/08/31/eu-enlargement-in-see6-and-country-reforms-the-justice-reform-in-albania-as-a-case-study/ Mon, 31 Aug 2020 08:18:35 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/?p=6762 The post EU Enlargement in SEE6 and Country Reforms: The Justice Reform in Albania as a Case Study appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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2020

EU ENLARGEMENT IN SEE6 AND COUNTRY REFORMS:

THE JUSTICE REFORM IN ALBANIA AS A CASE STUDY

policy study

Harmonization of timelines, comprehensive and long-term planning, availability of resources, and choice of right partners, condition the relationship between Reforms and Enlargement.

While the reforms in SEE6 are advancing, gradually they are becoming an integral part of the conditionality checklists put by EU. The existing conditions are becoming more detailed, new ones focused on measurable impact are added, and their scope is enlarged to include “fundamentals” such as democratisation, human rights and the rule of law. Their monitoring and certification is extended in time. The role of Member States in the Enlargement has increased through the monitoring on the ground, reporting and intervention by means of assistance in selected sectors

The relationship between Reforms and Enlargement is complex. If not planned carefully, it may result in Catch22 situations. Dilemmas appear and choices must be made when harmonizing the high complexity, deep societal changes, enormous resources and long-time perspective that the reforms need, with the pace of progress that a formal, highly normative and meticulously-planned process such as Enlargement requires. The first Catch22 situation may result in the scenario where the Enlargement progress is conditioned by the impact of reforms, while the Reforms cannot progress without the support of the mechanisms and resources provided by the Enlargement.

The second Catch22 situation relates to the fact that one cannot reform captured institutions without a critical mass of local political will in support of those institutional changes. But often this means asking the illegitimate actors that profit from the system, to help bring down the very system they are profiting from.

Notwithstanding its imperfections, the Justice reform in Albania constitutes a huge advancement in the establishment of a functional democracy in a post-communist country. Being the first reform of such depth and scope in the SEE6, its represents a test case for exposing the systemic importance of the design phase, the need to embed any system change on the socio-cultural and economic base of the local society, the importance of planning in the long-term perspective and with the required resources, and the value of well selecting the reform partners to carry such changes.

From a Reform Frontrunner Albania now should aim to be an Enlargement frontrunner. The success of such an endeavor will test the working hypothesis of irreversibility of democratic reforms in the SEE6, as well as the suitability of EU instruments supporting those reforms.

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Western Balkans’ Plight is Wake-up Call for Europe https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2021/03/24/western-balkans-plight-is-wake-up-call-for-europe/ Wed, 24 Mar 2021 09:18:59 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/?p=7714 The post Western Balkans’ Plight is Wake-up Call for Europe appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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2021

Western Balkans’ Plight

is Wake-up Call for Europe

Op-ed

The next few years will be decisive for the democratic and European future of the Western Balkans. In addition to a credible enlargement perspective and a positive enlargement narrative, which needs to be reinvented and reinvigorated, it is vital to support rule of law, civil dialogue, pluralism and the fight against corruption as well as the social dimension. It is crucial to invest more in social inclusion, to support the broad vision of just and democratic societies, which needs to include various bottom-up initiatives and actors. This Op-ed is prepared and published in the framework of the project “Europeanisation meets democracy from below: The Western Balkans Europeanisation meets democracy on the search for new European and democratic Momentum (WB2EU)” co-funded by the European Commission under its Erasmus+ Jean Monnet programme.

Our “WB2EU network” will activate, connect, research, disseminate and create joint output on the defined topics by bringing together academia, civil society and relevant stakeholders on national, regional and EU level. The project is led by the Austrian Society for European Politics (ÖGfE) and includes 16 renowned think-tanks, do-tanks, higher education institutes and policy centres from the European countries that will be most decisive for the enlargement process in the upcoming years.

For more information about this project, please visit the project website: https://www.wb2eu.eu/.

*This op-ed has been also published at Balkan Insight (https://balkaninsight.com/?p=961993) and Der Standard (https://www.derstandard.at/story/2000125235467).

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Securing the Resilience of Justice Sector Reform in Albania https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/2021/03/29/securing-the-resilience-of-justice-sector-reform-in-albania/ Mon, 29 Mar 2021 09:51:27 +0000 https://cdi.connecting-youth.org/?p=7704 The post Securing the Resilience of Justice Sector Reform in Albania appeared first on CDINSTITUTE.

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2021

SECURING THE RESILIENCE OF

JUSTICE SECTOR REFORM IN ALBANIA

policy study

Once set up or reformed, the Justice institutions of the six South-East European countries (SEE6) must function efficiently and produce qualitative and effective outputs without permanent external assistance. To be sustainable, new structures must be well governed. To be resilient, they should plan for the long term, taking into account the availability of local resources, and carrying out regular risk-management exercises. Good governance features of effectiveness, efficiency, transparency, accountability, predictability, sound financial management and integrity compliance must be embodied into their architecture and functioning mechanisms.

In the case of justice reform in Albania, good governance of new institutions implies designing organisational structures that are fit for purpose, and attributing the appropriate budgets, logistics and systems needed for the effective fulfilment of their mandates. It involves making sure that responsibilities and tasks are clearly assigned and that staff are motivated and have the competences required to carry out their duties with the highest degree of integrity and professionalism.

By applying an ‘appreciative inquiry’ approach, this policy study identifies and assesses features of Albania’s new structures and institutions that belong to the positive core of justice sector reform: vision, values, key competences, basic infrastructure, embedded knowledge, learning processes, organizational achievements, technical and financial assets and resources, positive macro trends, and strength of partners. In a constructive, yet critical way, this report aspires to embolden those (f)actors that drive justice sector reform in the SEE6 forward.

This policy study was prepared by Mr. Steven Blockmans, Director of Research, Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), Brussels and Mr. Ardian Hackaj, Director of Research, Cooperation and Development Institute (CDI), Tirana. It follows the previous study “EU ENLARGEMENT IN SEE6 AND COUNTRY REFORMS: THE JUSTICE REFORM IN ALBANIA AS A CASE STUDY”.

Click here to read the report in Albanian language.

*This policy study is prepared and published in the framework of the project “Preparing and Supporting Albania for the EU Accession Process – ALBE”, implemented by Cooperation and Development Institute (CDI) and supported by the Dutch Embassy in Tirana.

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