Mediterranean Policy Brief

The Mediterranean Policy Brief series is conceived as a platform for delivering rigorous, concise, and action-oriented analysis on the major economic, social, and geopolitical dynamics shaping the Mediterranean region. In a context marked by interconnected crises—geopolitical instability, green and digital transitions, demographic imbalances, migration pressures, and widening inequalities—the Mediterranean emerges not as a periphery, but as a strategic crossroads of global transformations.

Additional information

9 publications — Mediterranean Policy Brief

Publications list

The paper examines how the level of digital development in the Euro-Mediterranean countries (Euromed 9: Italy, Spain, France, Greece, Portugal, Cyprus, Malta, Slovenia and Croatia), as measured by the Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI), is associated with active ageing outcomes as captured by the Active Ageing Index (AAI). The underlying premise is that the European digital transition may represent, for rapidly ageing societies, both an opportunity and a risk: it can foster autonomy, parti…

The Mediterranean is facing an increasingly complex combination of climate risks, tensions linked to national and regional policies, socio-economic instability and forced migration. Current strategies of regional cooperation between Southern Europe, North Africa and the Middle East remain fragmented. Although the role of younger generations is acknowledged, it has not yet been structurally integrated at either the European or the Mediterranean level. This policy brief summarises the main empiric…

Mediterranean Policy Brief 7-26

Oltre i confini. Migrazione e scambio culturale come leve di trasformazione nel Mediterraneo

2026 - Immacolata Caruso, Valentina Noviello et al.

This policy brief synthesises and reworks the contents of the chapter “From Borders to Cooperation: Migrants and Culture in the Geopolitical Balance of the Mediterranean”, offering a critical reflection on migration dynamics, cultural exchanges, and geopolitical balances within the Mediterranean basin. The original text provides the theoretical and empirical framework, here condensed in order to highlight the strategic connections between human mobility, cultural heritage, and sustainable develo…

The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) is emerging as a transformative platform reshaping geopolitical and geoeconomic dynamics across the Mediterranean. Designed as a multilateral, transparent and standard-based initiative, IMEC offers an alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which has been criticised for asymmetric dependencies and limited transparency (Oberhauser, 2024; Kaddorah, 2024). IMEC advances a model grounded in economic and geopolitical trust, fosterin…

Mediterranean Policy Brief 5-26

Mediterraneo come “mediatore”: il ruolo strategico dei paesi “centrali” nel commercio globale

2026 - Francesco Prota, Valeria Farinola

As geopolitical conflicts escalate and global value chains restructure, Mediterranean countries can play a crucial role in connecting opposing blocs, serving as trade and investment bridges. This policy brief examines the strategic position of Mediterranean countries, analyzing their trade routes, key partners, and preferred industries. The findings suggest that Mediterranean nations could help maintain the resilience of global value chains in a polarized global economy and foster stronger re…

Mediterranean Policy Brief 4-26

L'impatto della Belt and Road sul commercio della Cina con i paesi Mediterranei

2026 - Lewoye Bantie Baylie, Anna Maria Ferragina

This study explores the impact of the Belt and Road initiative (BRI) on the dynamics of trade between China and the Mediterranean countries analysing the trade potential before and after the implementation of the BRI. Using an augmented gravity model and panel data from 2003 to 2020, we conclude that there is a complex and imbalanced pattern of trade between China and the Mediterranean region and trade potential exploitation is strongly asymmetric across countries. By diversifying China’s exp…

Mediterranean Policy Brief 3-26

Oltre il cessate il fuoco: Riflessioni sule crisi intrecciate di Palestina e Sudan

2026 - Francesca Caruso, Andrea Dessì

In 2025, the crises in Palestine and Sudan – though different in history and visibility – reveal an already emerging trend: the normalisation of instability and the return of military unilateralism, accompanied by a weakening of multilateralism and international law. Both are marked by humanitarian catastrophes and large-scale violence against civilians. The two crises have significant regional repercussions: the Israel–Hamas conflict has rapidly drawn in Lebanon, the occupied West Bank, Yemen/…

Mediterranean Policy Brief 2-26

Geoeconomia e frammentazione nel Mediterraneo: verso una nuova architettura di influenza economica

2026 - Salvatore Capasso, Valerio Filoso

The Mediterranean is undergoing a profound geoeconomic realignment that reshapes the balance of power between its shores. While Southern Europe faces long-term stagnation exacerbated by demographic decline and structural rigidities, the economies of the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean, despite political and financial fragilities, are becoming increasingly dynamic, leveraging energy resources, infrastructural corridors, and youthful human capital. The region has become a laboratory of asymm…

Mediterranean Policy Brief 1-26

La Geoeconomia dell’Energia nel Mediterraneo: tra Sicurezza e Cooperazione

2026 - Irene Bosco, Giovanni Canitano

The Mediterranean is emerging as a highly strategic region in the global geoeconomics of energy, characterised by structural asymmetries in dependence on fossil fuels, in the development of renewable energy sources, and in geopolitical positioning. This policy brief analyses the energy profile of MENA countries and Mediterranean Europe, highlighting how the energy transition is uneven across the region and how it requires targeted policies capable of fostering dialogue between public and private…

Mediterranean Policy Brief — Additional information

This series aims to bridge the gap between scientific research and public decision-making, translating empirical evidence, comparative data, and research findings into accessible insights and policy-relevant tools. Contributions to the Mediterranean Policy Brief are designed to engage national and European institutions, international organisations, public administrations, and socio-economic stakeholders, offering analytical frameworks, policy options, and operational recommendations.

Promoted by the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche – Department of Human and Social Sciences, Cultural Heritage (DSU), the Mediterranean Policy Brief forms part of the CNR’s broader commitment to strengthening the role of social sciences and humanities in supporting public policies, through interdisciplinary approaches and a Mediterranean perspective grounded in interdependence between Europe, Africa, and the Middle East.

Each Policy Brief addresses key issues for the future of the region—including economic development, labour and demography, environmental sustainability, food and energy security, migration, innovation, and governance—placing strong emphasis on comparative analysis, data quality, and the medium- to long-term impacts of public policies.

At a time when public decision-making increasingly requires timely, reliable, and context-sensitive knowledge, the Mediterranean Policy Brief seeks to contribute to an informed and responsible policy debate, supporting the design of more equitable, sustainable, and cooperative strategies for the Mediterranean and for Europe as a whole.