The Political Economy of Libyan Crisis

Authors

  • Authors

  • Adel Zeggagh
  • Sofiane Mansouri

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12816/0040874

Keywords:

Libya, ISIL, Renter Economy, Political Economy

Abstract

The relationship between Morocco's military and the country's political elite – in particular its monarchy– was formed alongside the state's very apparatus immediately following independence. The military came to take a neutral approach to the rapidly developing pattern of partisan jockeying between the various political camps vying for power, and tended to find ways that would allow military positions to remain firmly within the royalist camp. These early patterns, established at the very birth of the modern Moroccan state, formed the basis on which these two powers would get along in the years to come. In tracing this relationship, the paper writes of a historic battle for power in the country, and identifies longstanding reasons for the vested interested of the Moroccan elite in ensuring the tranquility of relations between the Royal Court and the military establishment.

Author Biographies

  • Adel Zeggagh
    Professor of Political Sciences, University of Batna, Algeria.
  • Sofiane Mansouri
    Professor of Political Sciences, University of Batna, Algeria.

Published

2017-03-01

Issue

Section

Articles