Cross-border cooperation has a long tradition in the
Upper Rhine Valley. The inhabitants of the region have always interacted across the currently known borders. These frequent economic and social interactions across borders also made cooperation on an administrative level increasingly necessary. During the 19th century however, the amount of cross-border cooperation in the region decreased significantly. The reasons for this can be found in the growing nationalism and outbreak of the
Franco-Prussian War. The outbreak of the
First World War, which lead to the enforcement of the borders, worsened the situation additionally. During both world wars, trade on a local level was still going, but an administrative cooperation on a subnational level seemed impossible. The creation of the association
Regio Basiliensis in 1963 and the
Regio du Haut-Rhin in 1965 were proof that the efforts of institutionalizing the cross-border cooperation in the region started to bear fruits. Anyhow, the informal character of this cooperation was critically observed by the nation-states. The three governments therefore decided to institutionalize the cooperation. This was officially achieved with the ratification of the treaty of Bonn on 22 October 1975. In the first three periods of the program, the region of the upper-rhine was split into different regional Interreg-programs,
PAMINA for the northern part and
Oberrhein Mitte-Süd (german for upper-Rhine mid-south) for the southern part
. Since 2007, both regions are subject of the same Interreg program,
Interreg Oberrhein. Since its implementation, the program allows promoters of projects to receive funds from the
European Union.
The conference of the Upper-Rhine Almost simultaneously with the ratification of the treaty of Bonn in 1975, two regional committees were founded: The
Comité bipartite for the northern part and the
Comité tripartite for the southern part. However, in the following years the division proved to be increasingly ineffective. With the establishment of the TAB in 2003, the first coordinated strategy for spatial-planning in a trinational region was formed.
The Eurodistricts In 2003, on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the
Élysée Treaty, Chancellor of Germany
Gerhard Schröder and President of France
Jacques Chirac, proposed the creation of the
Strasbourg-Ortenau Eurodistrict. This proposal created a dynamic. Just one year after the founding of the Eurodistrict Strasbourg-Ortenau in 2005, the Eurodistrict of the Region Freiburg / Centre Alsace was founded. The interest to create a Eurodistrict in the region of Basel was already expressed during the planning of the Eurodistrict Strasbourg-Ortenau. The aim was to further develop the structures of the TAB. To achieve this, a project outline was developed by a trinational steering committee in cooperation with Regio Basiliensis and the TAB association. The idea first had to be ratified by the individual entities, before the foundation agreement could be signed. The foundation agreement of the Trinational Eurodistrict of Basel was finally signed on 26 January 2007 in the French city Saint-Louis. == Structure ==