Geographic area of the Alpine Convention
The Institutions of the Alpine Convention
The Alpine Conference
The Alpine Conference is the body that takes the most important decisions on behalf of the convention. The conference is held at the end of each two-year presidency of the Alpine Convention, which rotates between the contracting parties. The conference is chaired by the current presidency, for the period 2022–2024 the presidency is held by Slovenia. All the Alpine Conferences:The Permanent Committee
The permanent committee is the executive body of the Alpine Convention. It is composed of all member delegations and guarantees that the basis, the principles and the objectives of the convention are implemented. The permanent committee analyses the information submitted by the member states in implementing the convention and reports to the Alpine Conference; prepares programs for meetings of the Alpine Convention and proposes the agenda; sets up working groups that have to formulate Protocols and recommendations and it coordinates their activities; examines and harmonizes the contents of draft Protocols and makes proposals to the Alpine Conference. The permanent committee meets twice a year.The Compliance Committee
The compliance committee is the body that oversees implementation of the commitments and obligations taken under the Alpine Convention. Every 10 years, Contracting Parties have to publish a report concerning the implementation of the convention and its protocols. The first report was adopted at the Xth Alpine Conference (March 2009).The Permanent Secretariat
The permanent secretariat, created in 2003, supports all the other bodies of the Alpine Convention by providing logistic and administrative support, and by helping the Contracting parties, especially in implementing projects. The secretariat has its main office inThematic Working Bodies
The permanent committee can establish thematic working bodies, with two-year mandates, on topics it considers relevant to support sustainable development within the Alps. The main responsibility of these working groups is the development of new protocols, recommendations and implementation measures, studies of ongoing developments and reports on the progress to the Alpine Conference and permanent committee. Nine working groups and platforms are currently active: * Working Group Transport * Natural Hazards Platform * Ecological Network Platform * Water Management Platform in the Alpine space * Large Carnivores and Wild Ungulates and Society Platform – WISO * Working Group "Macro-regional strategy for the Alps" * "Mountain Farming" Platform * "Mountain Forest" Working group * Expert Group -Report from the State of the Alps- Working groups active in the past were: * Working Group UNESCO World Heritage * Working Group "Demography and Employment" * "Sustainable tourism" Working groupFramework Convention and its Protocols
The first meeting of interested countries took place inProtocols and Declarations linked to the Framework Convention
Under the convention, Member States should adopt specific measures in twelve thematic areas (Population and Culture, Spatial Planning, Air pollution, Soil Conservation, Water Management, Conservation of Nature and the Countryside, Mountain Farming, Mountain Forests, Tourism, Transport, Energy, and Waste Management). Of these areas, eight are now protocols annexed to the Framework Convention: *Spatial Planning and Sustainable Development; *Mountain Farming; *Conservation of Nature and Landscape Protection; *Mountain Forests; *Tourism; *Soil Conservation; *Energy; *Transports. Two new protocols, not related to a specific thematic area, have since been adopted: * Settlement of disputes; *Adherence of the Principality of Monaco to the Alpine Convention. The Alpine Convention includes two Declarations that could not be turned into Protocols: * Declaration on Population and Culture; * Declaration on Climate Change.Publications of the Permanent Secretariat of the Alpine Convention
* Alpine Signals 1. The Alpine Convention- Reference guide, 2010, second edition, available in English, German, French, Italian and Slovenian. * Alpine Signals 2. The Alpine Convention is taking shape, 2004, available in German, French, Italian and Slovenian. * Alpine Signals 3. Cross-border ecological network, 2004, available in German, French, Italian and Slovenian. * Alpine Signals 4. Natural events documentation, 2006, available in German, French, Italian and Slovenian. * Alpine Signals 5. Mitigation and adaptation to climate change in the Alpine Space, 2008 * Alpine Signals 6 * Report on the State of the Alps #1. Transport and Mobility, 2007 * Report on the State of the Alps #2. Water and water management issues, 2009 * Report on the State of the Alps #3. Sustainable rural development and innovation, 2011 * Report on the State of the Alps #4. Sustainable tourism in the Alps, 2013 * Report on the State of the Alps #5. Demographic changes in the Alps, 2015 * Report on the State of the Alps #6. Greening the economy in the Alpine region, 2017See also
* List of national parks of the Alps * Alpine Space Programme, an EU co-funded programme to enhance the competitiveness and attractiveness of the alpine region * European Landscape Convention * Alpine Town of the Year * Via AlpinaReferences
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