
Political Discourse in the Maghreb: An Analysis of Amazigh Identity in Algeria and Morocco
Author(s) -
Peter MacDonald
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
flux
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2562-6094
DOI - 10.26443/firr.v11i1.53
Subject(s) - plural , politics , indigenous , independence (probability theory) , identity (music) , ethnic group , political instability , geography , ethnology , political science , gender studies , sociology , law , linguistics , ecology , philosophy , statistics , physics , mathematics , acoustics , biology
The Imazighen (plural of Amazigh) are an indigenous group primarily located in Northern and Western Africa. While Amazigh communities are present across the Maghreb, the role of Amazigh identity in Morocco and Algeria is of particular interest given each country's distinct treatment of ethnic and linguistic minorities. In Algeria, Amazigh identity is not as overtly politicized as in Morocco, wherein Amazigh communities are often at the forefront of public discourses and are often scapegoated as a source of political instability. Compared to Morocco, Algerian Imazighen generally experience higher acceptance levels due to numerous social, political, historical, and geographic factors that underpin the treatment and perceptions of Amazighté in Morocco and Algeria today. This article analyzes Algeria and Morocco's respective independence movements, political systems, language laws, and geographic topography to link the contemporary role of Amazigh identity to each national setting's unique history, politics, and geography.