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The European Centre for Parliamentary Research and Documentation (ECPRD) is a parliamentary network which was founded in 1977.
The Centre aims to facilitate the exchange of information, ideas, and experiences between the administrations of parliaments in Europe. Sharing successful practical experiences helps to intensify existing cooperation between parliaments in all areas of parliamentary business, including administration, legislation, information, research, and documentation. The Centre collects and distributes studies which are produced by the parliamentary services. It also cooperates with other European networks, e.g. IPEX or TAIEX.
A parliamentary assembly can only become a member of ECPRD if it is already a member of the European Conference of Presidents of Parliaments. The centre is composed of the following members (as at June 2016): [1]
and the following parliamentary chambers of Member States of the European Union and the Council of Europe:
Besides this, the centre is available for states which enjoy observer status in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe:
Since 1977 the ECPRD has developed into one of the most important platforms of inter-European parliamentary cooperation. Every two years an official report on the activities of the European Conference of Presidents of Parliaments is presented. The publications of the ECPRD are published on the homepage of the centre. The centre's web presence serves as a communication platform for the administrations of the parliaments. If a parliament submits an enquiry to at least four European parliaments, both the enquiry and a template response are sent to the secretariat in Brussels and forwarded to the parliamentary assemblies. In the majority of cases all 27 EU-parliaments, or all participating parliaments, are polled. Even though the working languages of the ECPRD are English, French and German in practice most of the enquiries and responses are conducted in English.
Often there is very limited time available to produce responses to the enquiries. All enquiries and responses since the year 2000 are saved in the ECPRD database, even those which arrive after the time limit has expired. Topics which, from experience, can become relevant again are therefore available in the database at any time.
Year | Enquiries | Responses |
---|---|---|
2000 | 10 | |
2001 | 32 | 508 |
2002 | 58 | 847 |
2003 | 96 | 1 537 |
2004 | 137 | 2 294 |
2005 | 160 | 2 894 |
2006 | 174 | 3 359 |
2007 | 214 | 5 387 |
2008 | 174 | 5 143 |
2009 | 223 | 5 246 |
The topics of enquiry are numerous, e.g. parliamentary rights of verification, financing political parties, or the use of the European flag in the European parliaments. Other topics have included the regulation of the protection of minors and questions regarding the committees on human rights.
Once a year the ECPRD hosts a Conference of Correspondents to enable networking and direct multinational cooperation. Both the Centre and the Conference of Correspondents are managed by two co-directors and co-secretaries appointed by the European Parliament and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
In June 1977 the European Centre for Parliamentary Research and Documentation was founded in Vienna by the European Conference of Presidents of Parliaments as a hub of parliamentary cooperation. The conference entrusted the presidents of the European Parliament and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Emilio Colombo and Karl Czernetz respectively, to take measures to set up the centre. Klaus Pöhle, the first co-director of the center, served the longest term to date between 1977 and 1994.
The development of the centre was structured into three stages:
1978 – 1989: This stage was characterised by the development of standards for the information provided by national parliaments. In addition, working structures were developed; a correspondent was appointed in each national parliament; and working groups for the various fields of activities of parliamentary administration were developed.
1990 – 1996: During this stage the new democracies of Central and Eastern Europe were subsumed into the work of the centre; Electronic Data Processing was intensified in the national parliaments; parliamentary homepages were created.
1997 – 2009: This period saw an unprecedented growth in reciprocal enquiries, reflecting increased cooperation between national parliaments. A comprehensive seminar program was provided for the members of staff of the national parliaments. In May 2006 new statutes were accepted by the secretaries general at the European Conference of Presidents of Parliaments in Tallinn.
Four areas within the centre's remit, each overseen by one correspondent, are of special importance for inter-parliamentary exchange:
Although the centre's homepage has been fundamentally revised, access will remain restricted to members of the ECPRD.
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