Global and Local in Algeria and Morocco

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Algeria
Algerian State
Allal El Fassi
Amazigh Activists
Amazigh Movement
Arch Lands
Ben Badis
Berber Culture
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CEMA
cultural modernisation
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Etoile Nord Africaine
February 20th Movement
Front De Liberation Nationale
Globalisation
Gwangju Biennial
identity politics
International Monetary Fund
local responses to globalisation
Locality
macro analysis
Maghrib social change
micro
micro/macro analysis
micromacro analysis
Middle East
Moroccan Nationalism
Moroccan Political Parties
Morocco
nation-state
North Africa
North African Politics
North African Studies
Political Parties
postcolonial studies
Prepaid Calling Cards
regionalism
rural urban dynamics
Sharjah Art Foundation
space
Spatial Mobility
Steppe Zones
The Journal of North African Studies
transnational activism
Vice Versa
Wage Labour Economy
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138106611
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book brings together contributors across the disciplines to examine the local, national, regional and global processes that have shaped Maghribi societies, economies and politics since the colonial period.

Focusing equally on the local shape of global processes and on the broader significance of particular ‘ways of doing things’, these studies move beyond generalisations about globalisation and its impact on local societies, whether developmental or detrimental, of the ‘global in the local’, or of ‘glocalisation’. Cases range from the onset of the ‘first wave’ of globalisation in the colonial era to the most recent developments in identity politics, consumerism, and telecommunications. Contributors show how nationalising and globalising influences are seized, remade, and put to work in very different ways by High Atlas farmers or urban real estate speculators, human rights activists at the edge of the Sahara and amateur theatre actors in Mediterranean towns. Always located somewhere, these social actors nonetheless act in different ways, with different effects, at different levels of engagement, whether with each other, their own governments, or the wider world.

This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of North African Studies.

James McDougall is a Fellow of Trinity College at the University of Oxford, where he teaches modern European and world history, with a focus on the Middle East, Northwest Africa, and the global history of Islam. Robert P. Parks is the Founding Director of the Centre d’Études Maghrébines en Algérie, at the American Institute for Maghrib Studies’ Overseas Research Center in Algeria.