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Visegrad Fund

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The International Visegrad Fund is an international donor organization promoting development of closer cooperation among the Visegrad Group (V4) countries—the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia. The main aim of the fund is to strengthen the ties among people and institutions in Central and Eastern Europe through giving support to regional non-governmental initiatives. The Fund is the only institutionalized form of regional cooperation of the Visegrad Group countries.[1]

Backrground[edit]

On 14 May 1999, at the Visegrad summit in Bratislava, the Prime Ministers of the V4 countries agreed that no institutional structures should be set up for the Visegrad Group, with the sole exception of the secretariat of the International Visegrad Fund in Bratislava. An agreement on the establishment of the fund was signed at the summit of the V4 Prime Ministers in Stiřín near Prague on 9 June 2000. Based on the agreement, the purpose of the fund is to promote and develop cultural cooperation, exchanges in the field of science, research, cooperation in education, youth exchanges within the V4 region and regional cooperation between the V4 region and other countries, especially in the Western Balkans and the EU´s Eastern Partnership region.[2]

Funding[edit]

The financial support distributed by the fund amounts to EUR 8 million a year and is provided by equal contributions of the V4 governments. In addition, since 2012 another EUR 6,4 million was provided by external donor countries (Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, the United States). The funding is channeled through grants for multilateral projects selected following calls for proposals and in the form of scholarships/fellowships for international mobility of individual scholars and artists.[3]

How it works[edit]

The fund’s operations are run by an international staff of 13, consisting mostly of nationals of V4 countries and is managed by the Executive Director, who serves a rotating three-years diplomatic mission (order of rotation CZ, SK, PL, HU), as well as by the Deputy Executive Director (order of rotation PL, HU, CZ, SK). The V4 government are responsible for the supervision of the Fund’s activities and hold rotating, one-year presidencies. Czechia holds the IVF presidency from 1 January to 31 December 2018. The IVF Conference of Ministers and the Council of Ambassadors (composed of the ambassadors of the Visegrad countries accredited to the state which currently holds the IVF presidency) are the principal statutory bodies of the fund.[4]

File:Vf-4.jpg
Andor F. Dávid, Executive Director of the International Visegrad Fund

Executive Directors[edit]

  • 2000 – 2003 Urban Rusnák (Slovakia)
  • 2003 – 2006 Andrzej Jagodziński (Poland)
  • 2006 – 2009 Kristóf Forrai (Hungary)
  • 2009 – 2012 Petr Vágner (Czech Republic)
  • 2012 – 2015 Karla Wursterová (Slovakia)
  • 2015 – 2018 Beata Jaczewska (Poland)
  • 2018 – now Andor F. Dávid (Hungary)

Grant and mobility programs[edit]

Eligibility[edit]

The fund provides funding to a diverse range of activities in all areas of life. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), civil society organizations (CSOs), municipalities and local or regional governments, schools and universities, but also private companies are eligible for grant support, provided that their projects have a distinct focus on Visegrad region and further develop cooperation among project partners based in the Visegrad region.[5]

Other beneficiaries, predominantly NGOs from non-EU countries neighbouring with the Visegrad region – from countries of the Eastern Partnership, such as Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Ukraine, and the Western Balkans – Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia are eligible to recieve support for projects fousing on the transfer of the unique experience and know-how of the Visegrad Group countries with the processes of democratic transformation and regional integration. An important element of this wider regional cooperation facilitated by the fund is to support activities contributing to political and socio-economic reforms in the partner countries with the aim to support political association and further economic integration between the European Union and the Eastern Partnership and Western Balkans countries.[6]

Regional cooperation support distributed by Visegrad Fund between 2000-2016.

Areas of support[edit]

  • Culture & Common Identity
  • Education & Capacity Building
  • Innovation, R&D, Entrepreneurship
  • Democratic Values & Media
  • Public Policy & Institutional Partnership
  • Regional Development, Environment, Tourism
  • Social Development

External links[edit]

Official International Visegrad Fund site

Official YouTube channel of the International Visegrad Fund

References[edit]


This article "Visegrad Fund" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Visegrad Fund. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.

  1. "About Us - Visegrad Fund". International Visegrad Fund. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  2. "Annual Report on the Activities of the Visegrad Group Bratislava--Budapest--Prague--Warsaw, 2000". Visegrad Group. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  3. "About us - Visegrad Fund". International Visegrad Fund. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  4. "International Visegrad Fund". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Republic of Poland. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  5. "International Visegrad Fund". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  6. "Visegrad+ Grants". International Visegrad Fund. Retrieved 17 September 2018.