Partial agreement explained

Partial agreement is a term used within the Council of Europe to refer to a major activity of European cooperation that is organised by the Council of Europe but does not include all of its member states. This form of activity dates from a resolution adopted by the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers on 2 August 1951. The resolution allowed for the adoption of agreements by a limited number of member states, without the participation of the remainder. Any expenditure would be made by the participating states alone. This form of variable geometry in intergovernmental cooperation has not been imitated by other international organisations. This form of cooperation also allows some activities to include non-European states as full-fledged participants.

In 1993 the ground-rules were revised by the Committee of Ministers to take into account new developments. Statutory Resolution (93) 28 of the Committee of Ministers replaced the 1951 resolution. It defines three types of agreement:

- A partial agreement: some member States of the Council of Europe;

- An enlarged partial agreement: some member States with one or more non-member states;

- An enlarged agreement: all member States with one or more non-member states.

The Council of Europe currently lists its partial agreements as the following:

Agreement name Founding Official name Website
Council of Europe Development Bank1956
Centre for Modern Languages in Graz
Enlarged Partial Agreement on Cultural Routes2010
Enlarged Partial Agreement on the Observatory on History Teaching in Europe2020
Enlarged Partial Agreement on Sport2007
EUR-OPA Major Hazards Agreement1987EUR-OPA - The European and Mediterranean Major Hazards Agreement
European Audiovisual Observatory1992
European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines & HealthCare1964
Eurimages1988The European Support Fund for the co-production and distribution of films
GRECO1998Group of States Against Corruption
Pompidou Group1980Cooperation Group to Combat Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking in Drugs
North-South Centre1989European Centre for Global Interdependence and Solidarity
Register of Damage for Ukraine, or RD4U2022Register of Damage Caused by the Aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine
Venice Commission1990European Commission for Democracy through Law
Youth Card1991Partial agreement on Youth mobility through the Youth Card

Partial agreements are traditionally set up with a resolution of the Committee of Ministers. The European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines, which is usually listed as a Partial Agreement, falls outside of this definition, being the result of a treaty, and is thus technically a treaty body, such as the European Social Charter organs.

There is one agreement, the European Card for Substantially Handicapped Persons, dating from 1977, which was still-born, having never attracted sufficient interest from member states and so was never implemented.

Each agreement has its own form of supervision and management. A number of the agreements are supervised by the Committee of Ministers, others have their own executive boards.

In 2007, the activities of the public health partial agreement were transferred to the European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines, despite the fact that the member states were not the same.

The agreement on sport heralded a new development, dealing with an activity that had always been a mainstream intergovernmental activity but was relegated to a partial agreement to avoid it being axed altogether.

The Venice Commission is unique as being the one agreement which began life as a partial agreement and, being of its success, had to drop the qualifier 'Partial', when the last remaining member state decided to join up.

The Council of Europe treaty office issues regularly updated information on all partial and enlarged agreements, listing all member states, observers, dates of accession and reference texts.[1]

Further reading

Polakiewicz, J.: Treaty making in the Council of Europe (1999)

Notes and References

  1. http://conventions.coe.int/ Council of Europe treaty office web site