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FRIDE:
Morocco: Negotiating Change with the Makhzen - by Kristina Kausch:
15/05/2009
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 15
May 2009 --
Morocco
compares very favourably throughout the region in terms of democratic
achievements, and has often been held up as a model of Arab progressive
political liberalisation by Moroccan authorities and international observers.
Upon closer inspection, however, the picture of Moroccan democratic reform does
not appear quite as bright.
While
King Mohammed VI and the government have implemented a number of very important
and valuable reforms, these have remained selective, ad-hoc,
and in many cases flawed and superficial. Most importantly, the concentration of
all meaningful political power in the palace has remained in the hand of the
Makhzen, the political power apparatus behind the palace.
Freedom
of association – the right to form an association able to freely develop its
activities – is an often-neglected cornerstone of any democratic transition.
The Moroccan civil society landscape is known to be among the most diverse and
vibrant in the region.
While
associative life has been benefiting from a series of legal and political
improvements in recent years, a number of decisive challenges to free
association remain.
This
FRIDE Working Paper, written by Kristina Kausch, intends to accompany the Club
of Madrid’s efforts to strengthen freedom of association throughout the North
Africa and Middle East region, and provides an independent analysis of the
situation of civil society in Morocco. All findings are based on a wide range of
interviews among governmental and non-governmental Moroccan stakeholders.
Download
the full version of this publication, available in
English (299 kB)
French (424 kB)
Spanish (343 kB)
Related
publications:
An
Islamist Government in Morocco?
Human
Rights, Reconciliation and Human Development in Morocco
Morocco:
Whitewash, Resignation
Spain
and Morocco: Towards a Reform Agenda??
Planting
an Olive Tree: The State of Reform in Jordan by Ana Echagüe
Bahrain:
Reaching a Threshold by Edward Burke
Freedom
of Association and Civil Society in Egypt by Kristina Kausch
Bio
– author: Kristina Kausch
Kristina
Kausch is a Researcher at FRIDE's Democratisation Programme and focuses on
European policies of democracy promotion in the European neighbourhood. She
holds an MA in International Relations from the University of Göttingen. Prior
to joining FRIDE in 2004, she worked for several years on programmes of good
governance and democratisation for the German Technical Cooperation (GTZ), and
at the Bertelsmann Foundation.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., MaximsNews
Network, FRIDE,
freedom of
association, Club
de Madrid, democratisation,
democratization,
civil society, Middle
East, North Africa,
rule of law, human
rights, Ana Echagüe,
Kristina Kausch,
Edward Burke, Jordan,
Morocco, Bahrain,
Egypt, freedom
of expression, King
Mohammed VI, Makhzen,
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