All rights reservedKnieling, JoergOthengrafen, Frank2024-04-042024-04-042010978-80-01-05782-7https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14235/1524Book of proceedings: Annual AESOP Congress, 2010 Space is Luxury, Aalto, July 7-10thThe Baltic Sea Region has a long tradition of integrated regional development. For decades economic, social, cultural and ecological concerns have been tackled in a way that serves well as basis for a sustainable future. Nevertheless, global economic competition has become a challenge for the area. Strengthening a region's global competitiveness requires stronger links as well as synchronised and coordinated action between neighbouring regions and countries (transnational arena). This links „globalisation‟ with the concept of „macro-regions‟ which recently has been introduced by the European Commission adopting the Baltic Sea Region as the first model. The macro-region approach is intended to allow both European Union and its Member States to identify common needs and to allocate available resources to strengthen economic and social development and to enable sustainable development. The paper discusses potentials and restrictions of the Baltic Sea Region as a European macro-region.EnglishopenAccessmacro-regionmetropolitan regionmeta-regionsupra-regional partnershipintegrated spatial developmentspatial positioningspatial up-scalingMacro-regions as concept for European spatial integration? – discussing co-operation strategies in the Baltic sea regionsconferenceObject204-223