For two decades Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland have been cooperating in what they have called the Visegrad 4 group. Once they joined the European Union in 2004, some worried that the importance of this kind of regional forum would fade away but Christian Schweiger, a Lecturer in Government at the Durham University and a visiting Fellow at Central European Policy Institute, a think tank based in Bratislava, says these countries have, in fact, a unique position in the region and the EU - if they only knew how to take advantage of it.
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