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Cross Border Cooperation
Redaktioneller Artikel
Tourguide
Generally, cooperation between Germans and Danes in the border region has been fruitful for generations, although the initial phase after World War II was a difficult one. The German occupation of Denmark, the role of the German minority between the world wars and during the occupation, and the unresolved border issue in 1945 made it tougher to normalize conditions on the German-Danish border as it had been in other regions in Western Europe after the Second World War. Still, committed people in the border region were trying to establish German-Danish contacts since the 1950s. After 1960, German-Danish Days were held every two years as a cultural meeting in the border region. In 1971, a German-Danish committee was formed to investigate the pollution of the Flensburg Fjord and improve the water quality. In 1977, the Danish Sønderjylland (South Jutland) local authority and its counterparts on the German side (City of Flensburg, District of Nordfriesland, District of Schleswig-Flensburg) established a German-Danish administrative forum to discuss cross-border issues. A change of political generation and new funding opportunities from the EU intensified cooperation in the 1980s. In 1988, Schleswig-Holstein and Sønderjylland drew up a joint action program for the border region, which formed the basis for the first cross-border EU funding program. In 1997, cooperation was finally institutionalised by the name of "Region Sønderjylland-Schleswig", which today stands for a multitude of cross-border activities in culture, business, and society.