The Security-Democracy Trade-Off? EU Policies and Civic Space in Morocco
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Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
This study critically examines how the securitisation of EU
external policy in Morocco affects the country’s prospects for
democratisation. It places civil society at the centre of the analysis,
framing it as a key actor in bottom-up democratic transformation.
The research argues that the EU’s securitised agenda undermines
these efforts by reinforcing authoritarian practices and
constraining the development of a genuinely free and independent
civic space. This occurs primarily through the instrumentalisation
of civil society engagement mechanisms to implement EU
migration objectives, and through the marginalisation of critical
or politically sensitive actors whose involvement might jeopardise
stable relations with the Moroccan government.
The study draws on critical literature and document analysis
to explore the intersection between the EU’s strategic interests
and its normative claims in Morocco, alongside an assessment
of the country’s associational landscape. It also presents a case
study based on fieldwork in the Melilla-Nador border region, incorporating
interviews with civil society representatives. These local
perspectives shed light on how EU actions are perceived on
the ground, and how civil society actors interpret the dynamics of
democratisation, securitisation and migration governance.
Description
Second semester University: Université du Luxembourg.