The Hispano–Portuguese Summits or simply Iberian Summits (Spanish: cumbres ibéricas; Portuguese: cimeiras ibéricas) are formal meetings conducted by the Government of Portugal and the Government of Spain to discuss issues of mutual concern. The first one was held in November 1983 in Sintra, Portugal. They are chaired by the respective heads of government.[1] In the 2001 summit, both parts agreed to hold additional meetings between the foreign ministers in-between-summits in order to prepare the next Iberian summit in line.[1] Since 2004 presidents of Spanish border regions (Castile and León, Galicia, Extremadura and Andalusia) may also attend to the summits.[2]

Ian Cooper and Federico Fabbrini (2022) have mapped this bilateral summit between prime ministers as an instance of "bottom-up regional group within the European Union".[3]

List of Iberian summits

edit
Summit Date Location Prime ministers
(host & guest)
1st Summit November 1983 Sintra, Portugal Mário Soares & Felipe González
2nd Summit May 1985 Alcántara, Spain Felipe González & Mário Soares
3rd Summit October 1986 Guimarães, Portugal Aníbal Cavaco Silva & Felipe González
4th Summit November 1987 Madrid, Spain Felipe González & Aníbal Cavaco Silva
5th Summit November 1988 Lisbon, Portugal Aníbal Cavaco Silva & Felipe González
6th Summit February 1990 Carmona, Spain Felipe González & Aníbal Cavaco Silva
7th Summit December 1990 Quinta do Lago, Portugal Aníbal Cavaco Silva & Felipe González
8th Summit December 1991 Trujillo, Spain Felipe González & Aníbal Cavaco Silva
9th Summit December 1992 Funchal, Portugal Aníbal Cavaco Silva & Felipe González
10th Summit December 1993 Palma de Mallorca, Spain Felipe González & Aníbal Cavaco Silva
11th Summit November 1994 Porto, Portugal Aníbal Cavaco Silva & Felipe González
12th Summit January 1996 Madrid, Spain Felipe González & António Guterres
13th Summit October 1996 Ponta Delgada, Portugal António Guterres & José María Aznar
14th Summit November 1997 Madrid, Spain José María Aznar & António Guterres
15th Summit November 1998 Vilamoura, Portugal António Guterres & José María Aznar
16th Summit January 2000 Salamanca, Spain José María Aznar & António Guterres
17th Summit January 2001 Sintra, Portugal António Guterres & José María Aznar
18th Summit October 2002 Valencia, Spain José María Aznar & José Manuel Durão Barroso
19th Summit November 2003 Figueira da Foz, Portugal José Manuel Durão Barroso & José María Aznar
20th Summit October 2004 Santiago de Compostela, Spain José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero & Pedro Santana Lopes
21st Summit November 2005 Évora, Portugal José Sócrates & José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
22nd Summit [es] November 2006 Badajoz, Spain José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero & José Sócrates
23rd Summit January 2008 Braga, Portugal José Sócrates & José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
24th Summit January 2009 Zamora, Spain José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero & José Sócrates
25th Summit May 2012 Porto, Portugal Pedro Passos Coelho & Mariano Rajoy.
26th Summit May 2013 Madrid, Spain Mariano Rajoy & Pedro Passos Coelho
27th Summit June 2014 Vidago, Portugal Pedro Passos Coelho & Mariano Rajoy
28th Summit June 2015 Baiona, Spain Mariano Rajoy & Pedro Passos Coelho
29th Summit May 2017 Vila Real, Portugal António Costa & Mariano Rajoy
30th Summit November 2018 Valladolid, Spain Pedro Sánchez & António Costa
31st Summit October 2020 Guarda, Portugal António Costa & PPortugaledro Sánchez
32nd Summit October 2021 Trujillo, Spain Pedro Sánchez & António Costa
33rd Summit November 2022 Viana do Castelo, Portugal António Costa & Pedro Sánchez
34th Summit March 2023 Lanzarote, Spain Pedro Sánchez & António Costa
35th Summit November 2024 Faro, Portugal Luís Montenegro & Pedro Sánchez
Sources: [4][5]

References

edit
Citations
  1. ^ a b García Pérez 2011, p. 165.
  2. ^ Morán Blanco 2019, p. 6.
  3. ^ Cooper, Ian; Fabbrini :: SSRN, Federico (2022). "Regional Groups in the European Union: Mapping an Unexplored Form of Differentiation" (PDF). p. 957.
  4. ^
  5. ^ "Portugal y España preparan la cumbre ibérica para después del verano". La Vanguardia. 6 July 2020.
Bibliography

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

List of twin towns and sister cities in Spain

France Crevillent Fontenay-le-Comte, France Cuenca L'Aquila, Italy Bollène, France Cerreto Sannita, Italy Cuenca, Ecuador Paju, South Korea Plasencia, Spain

Azulejo

Seville became an important production center for a type of tile known as cuenca ("hollow") or arista ("ridge"). In this technique, motifs were formed by

Gonzalo Plata

Retrieved 31 August 2021. "Oficial: Plata em definitivo no Valladolid (Espanha)". Archived from the original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2022.

Spanish Civil War

Álvaro (30 January 2021). "Jaime Cortesão e os antifascistas portugueses na Espanha republicana e na guerra civil". Esquerda (in European Portuguese). Retrieved

War of the Spanish Succession

Presença, 2001, p. 177-178. Monteiro, Nuno Gonçalo: "A Guerra da Sucessão de Espanha" in Barata, Manuel Themudo e Teixeira, Nuno Severiano: Nova História Militar

Luiz Alberto Moniz Bandeira

of 2005 for the book Formação do Império Americano (Da Guerra contra a Espanha à Guerra no Iraque). He was subsequently awarded an honorary doctorate

International Brigades

Retrieved 25 April 2015. "Jaime Cortesão e os antifascistas portugueses na Espanha republicana e na guerra civil". Esquerda (in Portuguese). 30 January 2021

The Spanish Civil War (book)

translations soon followed: in 1961 into Portuguese (A guerra civil de Espanha) and French (La guerre d'Espagne), in 1962 into German (Der spanische Bürgerkrieg)