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Morocco mission aims to build bridges and silence scepticism

British scholars head for North Africa to forge links with territory neglected by UK sector. David Matthews reports

Published on
June 28, 2012
Last updated
May 26, 2015



Credit: AlamyBack to school: Cambridge aims to change perceptions of North Africa among the UK academy and the wider public


North Africa has rarely been absent from British newspapers and television screens since the events of the Arab Spring began to sweep the region in January 2011.

Historically, however, UK universities have often neglected study of the region, according to two scholars who embarked on a mission to Morocco in April to forge academic links with institutions in the country.

George Joff茅 is a research fellow who specialises in the Middle East and North Africa at the University of Cambridge, and Paul Anderson is deputy director of the institution鈥檚 Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Centre of Islamic Studies, which organised the delegation with the British Council.

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The trip was part of a series of visits by representatives from the centre to other Islamic studies departments worldwide: Cambridge scholars of Islam and the Middle East have already visited their counterparts at the University of Sarajevo and in Beijing.

According to the organisers, such visits can help to counter an 鈥渦nconscious prejudice鈥 against Islamist political movements - such as Egypt鈥檚 Muslim Brotherhood - that exists among Western scholars and journalists.

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In the UK, study of North Africa is rare, argued Dr Joff茅. 鈥淭here鈥檚 been a growth in a kind of hybrid study - Mediterranean studies - but it鈥檚 still very limited.鈥

Seek and ye shall find

In regards to Morocco, Dr Joff茅 said, the country has far stronger academic bonds with the US than it has with the UK. He added that British scholars have relatively weak contacts with North Africa as a whole.

He noted that there had been previous attempts to build links between Morocco and the UK academy: for example, in 2004, a fellowship in Moroccan and Mediterranean studies at the University of Oxford was endowed by the Moroccan British Society (an association that has close links to the country鈥檚 government). However, Dr Joff茅 had not heard of a UK university 鈥済oing out specifically to look for contacts鈥 in the country before.

The delegation to Morocco visited four universities in four cities, and heard British and Moroccan scholars lecture on subjects including politics, international relations, history, anthropology and sociology.

It is too early to think about joint research yet, Dr Joff茅 said, but 鈥渨e鈥檙e at the stage of building up contacts that didn鈥檛 exist before鈥.

鈥淢oroccan universities have good contacts in France. But what they don鈥檛 have is contacts in the anglophone world,鈥 he added.

He said this was not due to British scholars being 鈥渂locked鈥 by francophone connections, but simply because of the 鈥減aucity of opportunities for contact鈥. However, Dr Joff茅 said that the visit had helped to demonstrate 鈥渢hat we have an interest in them, not just them in us鈥.

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Keep it up

Dr Anderson said that 鈥渨hat we don鈥檛 want鈥 is for the visit to be a 鈥渙ne-off鈥 for scholars who then 鈥渕ove somewhere else鈥, so the mission was looking for ways to make the link more permanent.

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One possibility to cement the academic connection would be to bring young 鈥渦p-and-coming鈥 scholars from Morocco to visit Cambridge, he added.

As for the research strengths of Morocco itself, the country鈥檚 sector has made important contributions in anthropology and ethnography, Dr Anderson explained. However, it is weaker in linguistic, social and literary studies, sociology and science, added Dr Joff茅.

Nonetheless, 鈥渃ertainly in the social sciences鈥e鈥檙e looking at similar problems in terms of the areas we want to understand鈥, he said.

By talking to other universities and Islamic studies departments, Cambridge hopes to benefit from a variety of perspectives on the region - particularly useful as the consequences of the Arab Spring continue to unfold.

Dr Joff茅 said there was still 鈥渟cepticism鈥 from European and American scholars and journalists about the rise of Islamist parties, for instance.

鈥淭here is a scepticism, a disbelief that [Islamist politics] is a viable political alternative,鈥 he said.

Meanwhile, Dr Joff茅 added that he was keen to convince other UK universities to build links with Morocco and North Africa.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a question of persuading other universities when they don鈥檛 have the resources that they could benefit from this kind of visit,鈥 he said.

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david.matthews@tsleducation.com.

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