This report presents the results of a comprehensive Needs Assessment of the Social Economy in the Southern Mediterranean (within the framework of the AECID's Masar al’an Programme).
This thematic seminar aims to initiate an in-depth debate on the obstacles that have prevented a completion of an integration of the countries of the 5 + 5 area.
The central banks of eight Western Mediterranean countries discuss in Tunisia how to promote economic development in the region.
The Center for Strategic Studies of the Near East South Asia (NESA) as part of its continuing series of sub-regional working groups of the Strategic Studies Network (SSN) and in partnership with the IEMed holds its fourth NESA-IEMed workshop.
The UfM builds on the legacy of the Barcelona Process. Nevertheless, its first steps were hindered by a particularly unstable backdrop: poverty, unemployment and missing integration still remain among the main challenges to be faced.
The IEMed participates in the annual conference of the MED Confederation, an entity that aims to promote socio-economic cooperation in the Mediterranean to place this region in a better economic, commercial and social position.
The reforms that North African regimes have implemented from the 1990s to the present, especially in Morocco and Tunisia, neither generate general economic growth nor expand social justice or contribute to economic liberalization.
Euromed Capital in collaboration with the IEMed is organizing the 6th forum in Barcelona, during which several experts from the financial community, politicians and others analyze the impact of digitalisation on the world of business and finance.
Over the course of three days, the MedaWeek Barcelona hosts a number of key thematic and sectoral fora, more than 60 working sessions, and over 1,500 attendees from all corners of the world.
Economic prospects for the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan (MENAP) and Caucasus and Central Asia (CCA) regions are diverging.
Proposing policy strategies to stabilize Libya, promoting greater economic integration, as well as ensuring food security in the region, those topics are in the center of debate by forty experts participating in the annual MedThink 5+5 forum.
The Mediterranean region witnessed in recent years the development of new patterns of innovation, based on the use of new technologies by citizens, especially youth.
The conference features several sessions and debates with experts and representatives of financial and economic institutions to address issues such as the current role of central banks.