Brussels, 22 June 2026 | As Enlargement returns to the centre of the European agenda, the conversation around its current and future financial instruments has never been so timely and important. Invited to COELA and COWEB by the Cyprus Presidency of the Council of the EU, we presented with European Economic and Social Committee colleagues the Opinion on Civil Society’s Role in Supporting Reform under the Growth Plans for the Western Balkans and Moldova, and in Ukraine’s Reform Path, requested by the Cyprus Presidency.
The frank and open exchange with EU MS representatives focused on several key findings and recommendations of the Opinion, including the need to recognise civil society engagement as a structural governance requirement underpinning the sustainability and credibility of the enlargement process. Discussions covered also state of play of Enlargement Policy and considerations on how to improve RGF and better shape the future Global Europe instrument for an Enlargement policy that delivers.
CDI’s Executive Director, Krisela Hackaj, contributed to the discussions in her capacity as advisor to this Opinion, bringing to the discussions CDI’s place-based insights from its engagement with the Reform and Growth Facility through the initiative Increasing Albanian Civic Engagement Footprint in the Growth Plan, implemented with the support of the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Tirana, as well with the Reform Tracker.
CDI advocates for properly resourced, structural stakeholder engagement pillar embedded in the Reform Agenda – aligned with RGF governance requirements and Albania’s accession priorities – that both reinforces the reform conditionality framework and lays the institutional foundations for a whole-of-society approach under the Global Europe Instrument in the next Multiannual Financial Framework. For more information you can consult our contribution to the 2nd RGF Monitoring Meeting held in Tirana on June 2026.





