"In this meticulously researched and highly original study, Stacy
Holden does for the urban citizens of Fez what Paul Pascon did for
the tribesmen of the rural Haouz. She vividly documents the lives
of ordinary people and shows how their needs and wants unexpectedly
shape the structure of power in Morocco."--Jonathan G. Katz, Oregon
State University
Unlike most other countries in the Middle East and North Africa,
Morocco has had a stable government for centuries. Even when it was
a French protectorate (1912-56), the Alaouite Sultans wielded
centralized power. The reasons why are the subject of Stacy
Holden's book, and the answers may come as a surprise.
Holden successfully argues that, rather than the importance of a
theocratic government to the citizenry, the key factor in the
government's stability is its ability to provide food to its people
in an equitable manner, despite arid conditions.. Further, without
apologizing for abuses of power, she suggests that an authoritative
government may be the most logical form of government in the
semi-arid lands of the Arab-Islamic world.
She offers a new interpretation of Moroccan history by
demonstrating the ways in which the French policies regarding food
distribution were consistent with those of the precolonial Sultans.
In Holden's telling, it was the weaknesses of the French
government--especially when faced with local drought and global
recession that bankrupted the government--that led to its inability
to provide food to the people and subsequently to the rise of
popular nationalism.
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