European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions

This paper contributes to the literature that explores the effects of European integration, providing new evidence about its impact on population distribution in the EU28 regions (NUTS 3 level) during the period 2000-2018. The main objectives are to explore the effects of the recent three EU enlarge...

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Main Authors: Sofia GOUVEIA, Leonida CORREIA, Patrícia MARTINS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi 2020-11-01
Series:Eastern Journal of European Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2020_11SI_GOU.pdf
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spelling doaj-d194552ef9784bda93594a9a6d73bf502020-12-07T08:30:19ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of IasiEastern Journal of European Studies2068-651X2068-66332020-11-0111SI1029European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regionsSofia GOUVEIA0Leonida CORREIA1Patrícia MARTINS 2University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Vila Real, PortugalUniversity of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Vila Real, PortugalUniversity of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Vila Real, PortugalThis paper contributes to the literature that explores the effects of European integration, providing new evidence about its impact on population distribution in the EU28 regions (NUTS 3 level) during the period 2000-2018. The main objectives are to explore the effects of the recent three EU enlargements on the growth in population share within the border regions and to compare the behaviour between core and peripheral regions. We use an empirical difference-in-difference approach. The findings show that border regions experienced positive effects on growth in population share since EU integration, but it did not completely reverse their relative population decline. At the same time, the process of European integration seems to have aggravated the demographic decline of EU peripheral regions compared to the EU core regions. Moreover, for the regions that are both border and peripheral, the EU integration effect has been stronger than in border only regions.https://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2020_11SI_GOU.pdfbordercore-peripherydemographic changeregionseuropean integration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofia GOUVEIA
Leonida CORREIA
Patrícia MARTINS
spellingShingle Sofia GOUVEIA
Leonida CORREIA
Patrícia MARTINS
European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
Eastern Journal of European Studies
border
core-periphery
demographic change
regions
european integration
author_facet Sofia GOUVEIA
Leonida CORREIA
Patrícia MARTINS
author_sort Sofia GOUVEIA
title European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
title_short European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
title_full European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
title_fullStr European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
title_full_unstemmed European integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
title_sort european integration and its effects on population in border and peripheral regions
publisher Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi
series Eastern Journal of European Studies
issn 2068-651X
2068-6633
publishDate 2020-11-01
description This paper contributes to the literature that explores the effects of European integration, providing new evidence about its impact on population distribution in the EU28 regions (NUTS 3 level) during the period 2000-2018. The main objectives are to explore the effects of the recent three EU enlargements on the growth in population share within the border regions and to compare the behaviour between core and peripheral regions. We use an empirical difference-in-difference approach. The findings show that border regions experienced positive effects on growth in population share since EU integration, but it did not completely reverse their relative population decline. At the same time, the process of European integration seems to have aggravated the demographic decline of EU peripheral regions compared to the EU core regions. Moreover, for the regions that are both border and peripheral, the EU integration effect has been stronger than in border only regions.
topic border
core-periphery
demographic change
regions
european integration
url https://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2020_11SI_GOU.pdf
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AT patriciamartins europeanintegrationanditseffectsonpopulationinborderandperipheralregions
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