This collected volume investigates the ways in which historical training supports current activism and advocacy in global times by highlighting models of social activism and political representation in different parts of the world, with diverse social actions, strategies, and protest spaces.
Morocco is a fascinating society to examine protest movements in an authoritarian regime. For the first time ever, the contributors reply in detail to questions, challenges and findings regarding the implications of historically informed activism in Morocco. The cooperative perspective is the key to a better understanding as it reinvigorates a conversation between social scientists—sociologists, anthropologists, and political scientists—and historians about how to analyse social and political activism.
The main findings relate to the great structural transformations that have shaped the current power regimes in a longue durée perspective. How are social movements born, how do they mature, and how do they die? Through the dynamics of social mobilisation, we discover the structure of the power regime, the responses (strategies), and its forms of survival (resources and capacities).
Openings: The City and Its Actors of Resistance
págs. 13-30
A century of social mobilisation in Morocco: Bases for a historically informed activism
Laura Feliu Martínez, Josep Lluís Mateo, Ferran Izquierdo Brichs
págs. 31-54
Reform and rebelion during Kattaniyya Revivalism: the 1907 Hafiziyya uprising
págs. 57-70
págs. 71-86
págs. 87-100
págs. 103-118
The 1921 Riftian revolt in the valley of Al-Hoceima: The struggle afainst foreign occupation
págs. 119-132
The foundational myth of Moroccan nationalism: The recitation of the Latif and the protests in Salé against the Berber Dhahir (1930)
págs. 133-146
págs. 147-160
Resource sovereignty and state power: The 1937 revolt in Meknes
págs. 161-176
The so-called Infitifada in Tetouan: The incidents of February 1948
págs. 177-192
Not an ordinary day: 30th March 1952 in Tanger
págs. 193-206
The so-called Second Revolt: The Rifian revolt against the Mahzen (1958-1959)
págs. 209-222
Reviewing inmmobilism of an authoritarian regime: The 1965 social mobilisation and revolts in Casablanca
págs. 223-240
The city of Nador in 1984: The bread riots in Moroccan Periphery
págs. 241-254
On the way from strike to Intifada: The Fes events of 1990
págs. 255-270
Polarised activism on the "Woman Question": The Islamic March of Casablanca in 2000
págs. 273-286
A public protest agaisnt the Moroccan Makhzen: The Rif against territorial policy
págs. 287-298
Struggles for land rights: implications for female activism in Morocco
págs. 299-310
Local struggles and mass protest: The case of Imider in 2011
págs. 311-326
Beyond the 20F activism in Tetouan: The emergency of peripherical cities
págs. 327-338
págs. 339-350
págs. 351-364
The revolt of Candles: Citizen mobilisations against the Electric company in Tangier
págs. 365-376
Discovering Moroccan history through the lenses of photography: A form of inspiring activism
págs. 377-390
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