Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-c4f8m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T10:10:16.696Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Development of Selected Mutual Relations between the Czech Republic and Slovakia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 June 2014

Marián Halás*
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, Faculty of Science, Palacký University Olomouc, 17. Listopadu 12, 771 46 Olomouc, Czech Republic. E-mail: marian.halas@upol.cz

Abstract

For a period of 75 years after 1918 the territories of the present-day Czech Republic and Slovakia were part of one country, and therefore it was inevitable that very close relations between them would develop and which that could not suddenly be broken. Today, more than 20 years since the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, both of the newly formed countries are slowly reaching ‘adulthood’, and both the social situation and the development of mutual relations have been gradually stabilised. This contribution compares and evaluates the development of selected mutual relations between the Czech Republic and Slovakia. It is supported by a brief comparison of some basic features of the development of both countries, which is the information on which this study is based. The key part of the article comprises an analysis of the development of mutual relations and cooperation on a nationwide level. The trade and migration relations (labour and study migration) of both republics, especially after 1993, fall within the scope of the analysis. A separate section is devoted to the common borderland and the development and spatial differentiation of cross-border relations and cooperation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Academia Europaea 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Grasland, C. and Cattan, N. (1994) Dynamiques migratoires et recompositions territoriales en Tchécoslovaquie 1960–1992 (Paris: Équipe P.A.R.I.S. / CNRS – Université Paris I).Google Scholar
2.Cattan, N. and Grasland, C. (1996) Migration flows between the Czech and Slovak Republics – Which form of transition?’ In: Central Europe after the Fall of the Iron Curtain, Geopolitical Perspectives, Spatial Patterns and Trends (Vienna: Wiener Osteuropa Studien), pp. 319336.Google Scholar
3.Fassmann, H. and Hintermann, C. (1997) Migrationspotential Ostmitteleuropa: Struktur und Motivation potentieller Migranten aus Polen, der Slowakei, Tschechien und Ungarn (Vienna: Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften).Google Scholar
4.Halás, M. (2000) Zahraničný obchod SR s ČR. Geographical Studies, 7, pp. 98107.Google Scholar
5.Pavlínek, P. (1998) Foreign direct investment in the Czech Republic. Professional Geographer, 50(1), pp. 7185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6.Pavlínek, P. and Smith, A. (1998) Internationalization and embeddedness in East-Central European transition: the contrasting geographies of inward investment in the Czech and Slovak Republics. Regional Studies, 22(7), pp. 619638.Google Scholar
7.Vintrová, R. and Žd’árek, V. (2006) Konvergence České republiky a Slovenské republiky – současný stav a vybrané problémy. Ekonomický časopis, 54(5), 468489.Google Scholar
8.Myant, M. (2007) Economic transformation in the Czech Republic – a qualified success. Europe-Asia Studies, 59(3), pp. 431450.Google Scholar
9.Myant, M. and Smith, S. (2006) Regional development and post-communist politics in a Czech region. Europe-Asia Studies, 58(2), pp. 147168.Google Scholar
10.Marek, D. and Toušek, V. (1998) Změny v zaměstnávání občanů Slovenska v okresech ČR moravsko-slovenského pomezí (geografická analýza). Geografie, 10, pp. 9499.Google Scholar
11.Tomšíčková, B. and Toušek, V. (1999) Prostorové interakce na moravsko-slovenském pomezí. In: Europa regionów, wspólpraca regionalna (Katowice: Górnoślaska wyzsza skola handlowa), pp. 271280.Google Scholar
12.Halás, M. (2004) Migrácia obyvateľstva cez štátnu hranicu (na príklade pracovnej migrácie medzi SR a ČR). Acta Facultatis Rerum Naturalium Universitatis Comenianae,Geographica, 45, pp. 1325.Google Scholar
13.Divinský, B. (2007) Labour Market – Migration Nexus in Slovakia: Time to Act in a Comprehensive Way (Bratislava: International Organization for Migration).Google Scholar
14.Drbohlav, D. and Toušek, V. (2004) Czechs on the move – the cumulative causation theory of migration revisited. In: The Centennial Meeting of The Association of American Geographers (Philadelphia), available at: http://www.kge.zcu.cz/veda/migrace/on_the_move_soubory/frame.htm, accessed 21 August 2011.Google Scholar
15.Halás, M. (2005) Cezhraničné väzby, cezhraničná spolupráca: na príklade slovensko-českého pohraničia s dôrazom na jeho slovenskú časť (Bratislava: Univerzita Komenského).Google Scholar
16.Halás, M. and Řehák, S. (2008) Příspěvek k anatomii společného pohraničí České republiky a Slovenské republiky. Geografický časopis, 60(3), pp. 279298.Google Scholar
17.Fňukal, M., Kladivo, P. and Toušek, V. (2007) Zaměření přeshraniční spolupráce s polskými a slovenskými regiony v novém plánovacím období Evropské unie 2007–2013. In: V. Klímová (ed.), X. mezinárodní kolokvium o regionálních vědách (Brno: Masarykova univerzita), pp. 177185.Google Scholar
18.Halás, M. (2007) Development of cross-border cooperation and creating of Euroregions in the Slovak Republic. Moravian Geographical Reports, 15(1), pp. 2131.Google Scholar
19.Horáková, M. (2012) International Labour Migration in the Czech Republic, Bulletin No. 28. (Prague: Výskumný ústav práce a sociálních věcí/Research Institute for Labour and Social Affairs), available at http://praha.vupsv.cz/Fulltext/B28-MPMe.pdf accessed 21 November 2012.Google Scholar