Project: Understanding political change from the Margins: Social and Environmental Justice in Morocco and Tunisia
2020-01-01 – 2023-12-31
- Abstract
This project sets out to explore the changing state-society relations in Morocco and Tunisia from the rural margins Taking contentious politics as a starting point it wants to understand how social movements in the margins of society provoke political change and actively contribute to solutions to the challenges they (and society) face In spite of the fact that people living in the margins of Arab societies are predominantly portrayed as victims of centralized policies that favor, for example, large-scale industrial agriculture, resource extraction and/or metropolitan growth, they are also agents in the reconstruction of a new political world, especially within the ‘ost-Arab Spring’context As such, this study attempts to revalue the position and role of ‘he margins’in wider political transformations and problematizes the dominant trend of focusing primarily on what happens in the centers of power to understand political change in the region (ie in cities, on large public squares, within the ‘egime’ By using contentious politics in the margins as an entry point, the project contributes to the existing debates in three academic fields: development studies, (post-)democratization studies and social movement theory (SMT)
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
The Imider protest camp : resistance by repossession and lived citizenship at the global margins of Moroccan society
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Al-ʿUcha : a women farmworkers’ strategy for gendering workers’ rights in southern Morocco
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An Elusive Common: Land, Politics, and Agrarian Rurality in a Moroccan Oasis By Karen E.Rignall
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In het spoor van Fanon : orde, wanorde, dekolonisering
(2023) -
Local struggles and mass protests : the case of Imider in 2011
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- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
Claiming their right to possess : the Guich Oudaya tribe’s resistance to land grabbing
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Lost in transitions? Feudalism, colonialism, and Egypt's blocked road to capitalism (1800–1920)
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Urban megaprojects in Morocco : the globalization and agencification of authoritarian government
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Luxemburg on Tahrir Square : reading the Arab revolutions with Rosa Luxemburg's The Mass Strike
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- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
'Authoritarian resilience' as passive revolution : a Gramscian interpretation of counter-revolution in Egypt