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Spatial planning
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==European spatial planning== In 1999, a document called the [[European Spatial Development Perspective]] (ESDP) was signed by the ministers responsible for regional planning in the EU member states. Although the ESDP has no binding status, and the [[European Union]] has no formal authority for spatial planning, the ESDP has influenced spatial planning policy in European regions and member states, and placed the coordination of EU sectoral policies on the political agenda. At the European level, the term [[territorial cohesion]] is becoming more widely used and is for example mentioned in the draft EU Treaty (Constitution) as a shared competency of the European Union; it is also included in the [[Treaty of Lisbon]]. The term was defined in a "scoping document" in Rotterdam in late 2004 and is being elaborated further using empirical data from the ESPON programme<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espon.eu |title=espon.eu |publisher=espon.eu |access-date=2013-06-26}}</ref> in a document entitled "The Territorial State and Perspectives of the European Union".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ccre.org/docs/territorial_state_and_perspectives.pdf |title=Microsoft Word - TSP-First-Draft-as-of-260606.doc |format=PDF |access-date=2013-06-26}}</ref> At the minister's conference in May 2007 in Leipzig, a political document called the "Territorial Agenda" was signed to continue the process begun in [[Rotterdam]], revised in May 2011 in [[Gödöllő]].
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