5 research outputs found
Morocco’s illiberal regime and fragmented political society. Arab Citizenship Review No. 10, October 2015
The post-Arab Spring period in Morocco has undergone different stages of changing state-society
relations with regard to democracy, citizenship and human rights. The first stage, between
February 2011 and the summer of 2013, was characterised by popular protests demanding
democracy and freedom. People criticised public policies related to civil, political and social
rights (employment, health, education, the status of women, and the issue of Amazigh). This
outburst put the state in an awkward, defensive position. If we compare Morocco with the other
Arab Spring countries, the Moroccan state’s reaction was moderate in its use of violence and
repression, and it was positive, in that it resulted in the implicit, yet official acceptance of the
demands for democracy, citizenship and battling corruption. In his speech on 9 March 2011, the
king pledged to modify the Constitution and democratise the institutions
Senegal: Presidential elections 2019 - The shining example of democratic transition immersed in muddy power-politics
Whereas Senegal has long been sold as a showcase of democracy in Africa, including peaceful political alternance, things apparently changed fundamentally with the Senegalese presidentials of 2019 that brought new configurations. One of the major issues was political transhumance that has been elevated to the rank of religion in defiance of morality. It threatened political stability and peace. In response, social networks of predominantly young activists, created in 2011 in the aftermath of the Arab Spring focused on grass-roots advocacy with the electorate on good governance and democracy. They proposed a break with a political system that they consider as neo-colonialist. Moreover, Senegal’s justice is frequently accused to be biased, and the servility of the Constitutional Council which is in the first place an electoral court has often been denounced