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The Problem of Slums: Shifting Methods of Neoliberal Urban Government in Morocco
Authors:Koenraad Bogaert
Institution:Member of the Middle East and North Africa Research Group (MENARG) at the Department of Third World Studies, Ghent University, Belgium (e‐mail: Koenraad.Bogaert@UGent.be). He recently finished his PhD on ‘Urban Politics in Morocco: Uneven Development, Neoliberal Government and the Restructuring of State Power’.
Abstract:This article puts forward two main arguments. First, it highlights the relationship between different phases of neoliberalism in Morocco together with the specific methods and techniques of urban government that were deployed in an effort to govern the slums and their populations. A period of ‘roll back neoliberalism’ during the 1980s generated reforms that tried to increase government control over the urban territory to compensate for the negative social outcomes of structural adjustment. The subsequent period of ‘roll out neoliberalism’ coincided with the attempt to manage and regulate the slum population through new modalities of state intervention. Second, while evolutions in neoliberal government reflected a gradual process, this transition in Morocco was accelerated by security concerns following two moments of serious urban violence: the 1981 riots and the 2003 suicide bombings in Casablanca. Therefore, Morocco's recent political transformations cannot be understood in terms provided by the mainstream narrative linking economic liberalization to democratization. Rather, they reflect a profound shift towards intrinsically authoritarian modalities of neoliberal government which are clearly revealed at the urban scale.
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