Morocco overview

Morocco is included in the African and Euro-Mediterranean mobility space. There has been internal and international migration for generations. Migration trajectories are complex and have varied during different phases of the country’s history. Traditional migrations have been movements of mainly int...

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Autor principal: Aderghal, M.
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: University of London 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131343
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author Aderghal, M.
author_browse Aderghal, M.
author_facet Aderghal, M.
author_sort Aderghal, M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Morocco is included in the African and Euro-Mediterranean mobility space. There has been internal and international migration for generations. Migration trajectories are complex and have varied during different phases of the country’s history. Traditional migrations have been movements of mainly internal pastoral populations and commercial exchanges and pilgrimages. More recent migrations are driven by the search for work and better living conditions. Emigration for work from the countryside to the cities and abroad is a result of integrating the country’s economy into global market chains initiated at the end of the 19th century by colonial companies exploiting agricultural land, forests, and mineral resources. Independence in 1956 was followed by an extension of the labor market, an increase in the intensity of migration from the countryside to and between the cities, and a widening of access by rural and urban households to modern consumer goods. International emigration from Morocco was stimulated in the 1960s by the European demand for labor and was a factor in policies for economic growth.
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spelling CGSpace1313432025-12-08T09:54:28Z Morocco overview Aderghal, M. migration governance agriculture rural development policies women farmers remittances communities households Morocco is included in the African and Euro-Mediterranean mobility space. There has been internal and international migration for generations. Migration trajectories are complex and have varied during different phases of the country’s history. Traditional migrations have been movements of mainly internal pastoral populations and commercial exchanges and pilgrimages. More recent migrations are driven by the search for work and better living conditions. Emigration for work from the countryside to the cities and abroad is a result of integrating the country’s economy into global market chains initiated at the end of the 19th century by colonial companies exploiting agricultural land, forests, and mineral resources. Independence in 1956 was followed by an extension of the labor market, an increase in the intensity of migration from the countryside to and between the cities, and a widening of access by rural and urban households to modern consumer goods. International emigration from Morocco was stimulated in the 1960s by the European demand for labor and was a factor in policies for economic growth. 2023-07-28 2023-07-31T15:40:13Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131343 en Open Access University of London Aderghal, M. 2023. Morocco overview [Policy Brief of the Migration Governance and Agricultural and Rural Change (AGRUMIG) Project]. London, UK: SOAS University of London. 8p. (AGRUMIG Policy Brief Series 20)
spellingShingle migration
governance
agriculture
rural development
policies
women
farmers
remittances
communities
households
Aderghal, M.
Morocco overview
title Morocco overview
title_full Morocco overview
title_fullStr Morocco overview
title_full_unstemmed Morocco overview
title_short Morocco overview
title_sort morocco overview
topic migration
governance
agriculture
rural development
policies
women
farmers
remittances
communities
households
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131343
work_keys_str_mv AT aderghalm moroccooverview