Les Mardis du PCNS 18/10/2021: قراءة في البرنامج الحكومي 2026-2021: بين الفرص والتحديات

October 19, 2021

يخصص مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد حلقة برنامجه الأسبوعي "حديث الثلاثاء" لقراءة في البرنامج الحكومي 2026-2021: بين الفرص والتحديات مع أمين السعيد، أستاذ القانون الدستوري والعلوم السياسية بجامعة سيدي محمد بن عبد الله بفاس. حددت الحكومة الجديدة 10 التزامات كبرى تفعيلا لمبدأ ربط المسؤولية بالمحاسبة وتيسيرا لتتبع وتقييم الحصيلة الحكومية. أبرز هذه الالتزامات تتمثل في توفير مليون فرصة عمل خلال الخمس سنوات المقبلة، رفع نسبة النساء العاملات إلى أكثر من 30 بالمئة بدلا من 20 بالمئة حاليا، تحسين المنظومة التربوية بهدف تصنيف المغرب ضمن أحسن 60 دولة عالميا عوض المراتب المتأخرة في جل المؤشرات الدولية ذات الصلة، تحفيز الاقتصاد الوطني، خاصة بعد الصدمة الخارجية القوية التي تعرض لها اقتصاد البلاد عقب انتشار جائحة كورونا وما ترتب عليها من آثار خاصة في صفوف الشباب والنساء. ثم تعزيز دعائم الدولة الاجتماعية وتثمين الرأسمال البشري المغربي، وحفظ كرامته، وتكريس حقوقه وتوفير ظروف رفاهيته. هل يمكننا القول إن محتوى البرنامج الحكومي ينطبق مع مخرجات تقرير اللجنة الخاصة بالنموذج التنموي الجديد؟ تعميم الحماية الاجتماعية مشروع استراتيجي لبلدنا. إلى أي مدى يمكن لهذا البرنامج أن يعزز التماسك الاجتماعي ويحدّ من التفاوت الاجتماعي؟ إلى أي مدى يمكن للحوار الثلاثي بين الحكومة والنقابات وأرباب العمل أن يساعد في تعزيز هذا النموذج وتطوير الدولة الاجتماعية؟ البرنامج يتوقع نموا بنسبة 4٪ ومليون وظيفة وإعادة تأهيل نظامي التعليم والصحة، هل هذا قابل للتحقيق وواقعي؟ هل هذه الإجراءات كافية؟ ما هي الموارد المتاحة التي يمكن للحكومة الاستفادة منها في تمويل برنامجها؟ 30 دقيقة: قراءة في البرنامج الحكومي 2026-2021: بين الفرص والتحديات تسيير: إيمان لهريش، مسؤولة عن المشاريع بمركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد المتدخل: أمين السعيد، أستاذ القانون الدستوري والعلوم السياسية بجامعة سيدي محمد بن عبد الله

Speakers
Imane Lahrich
Head – Research Valorization
Imane Lahrich is the Head of Research Valorization Department, having previously served as a Partnerships & Research Support Officer at the Policy Center for the New South since 2019. She mainly worked on security-development related projects. She has experience as a Project Manager in a Strategic Intelligence firm (2017-2019) and as a research consultant in the MENA region, focusing on international development and the Rule of Law. Imane Lahrich holds a Master's in Political Studies and a Bachelor's in Political Science from Mohammed V University of Rabat. She also participated in a one-year exchange program at Masaryk University in the Czech Republic under the EMMAG MUNDUS Excellence scholarship.     ...

RELATED CONTENT

  • December 15, 2018
    Moderator Claude Grunitzky, Chairman and Editor-in-chief, True Africa Speakers Mohamed Benaissa, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Kingdom of Morocco Assia Bensalah Alaoui, Ambassador at Large of HM the King of Morocco Vasco Alves Cordeiro, President, Regional Government of the Azores...
  • December 14, 2018
    PLENARY VI: THE DIGITAL AGE AND THE MODERN SOCIAL CONTRACT Moderator: Uduak Amimo, Consultant, Uduak Amimo Consulting Speakers: Jamira Burley, Head of Youth Engagement and Skills, Global Business Coalition for Education Sunjoy Joshi, Chairman, Observer Research Foundation Enrique Mendiz...
  • December 14, 2018
    PLENARY VI: THE DIGITAL AGE AND THE MODERN SOCIAL CONTRACT Moderator: Uduak Amimo, Consultant, Uduak Amimo Consulting Speakers: Jamira Burley, Head of Youth Engagement and Skills, Global Business Coalition for Education Sunjoy Joshi, Chairman, Observer Research Foundation Enrique Mendiz...
  • Authors
    December 6, 2018
    This Policy Paper aims to provide a better understanding of the drivers of youth unemployment in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region by examining some common factors and then delving deeper into the case of Morocco, a relatively stable country that has historically been a source of large emigration, especially towards Europe. The MENA region has some of the highest total and youth unemployment rates in the world. High youth unemployment is especially worrisome because it ...
  • Authors
    Tiago Ribeiro dos Santos
    December 3, 2018
    Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson caught policymaker’s attention to the critical role of institutions for development. Their work gives too much emphasis to the prospects of revolution, however. A reading of the World Bank’s World Development Report of 2017 points to directions that all actors involved in the process, whether domestic or international, elite or non-elite, can take to improve societies. ...
  • Authors
    Nchimunya Hamukoma
    Nicola Doyle
    Archimedes Muzenda
    November 29, 2018
    The twin cities of Rabat and Salé on Morocco’s west coast embody prominence in Morocco’s past and present, Rabat as capital and Salé as the third most populous city. Less than 20 years ago, however, Salé was charac¬terised by large slums, high unemployment, poor service delivery and limited mobility. Today, it is a changed city, providing housing to the majority of Rabat’s working class, with a modern tram linking the two cities. Morocco’s ‘Cities without Slums’ programme, launched ...
  • Authors
    November 26, 2018
    Young researchers face several challenges in getting recognition for their work at the level of institutions and senior intellectual communities. Obstacles include trust issues, funding restrictions, and linguistic and cultural barriers. To these aforementioned limitations, researchers and university students from the Southern Mediterranean shore face an additional struggle, which is access to mobility. The latter is a key driver of quality in the research field. Depending on the su ...
  • Authors
    November 13, 2018
    Livelihoods of northern Niger’s population depended for centuries on trade and cross-border movement of licit goods with Libya. Historical trends of domestic and regional shocks demonstrated the ability of local communities to adapt and adjust to transformations caused by these shocks to survive. People moving through and living in the area have different motivations and reasons to cross to Libya and beyond, but economic drivers remain the key factor. The local economy has suffered ...
  • Authors
    November 5, 2018
    Scholars of social movements and global protest have long neglected social movements in Africa, ostensibly because African societies are too rural, too tradition- or ethnicity-bound, or lacking advanced class formations. Those who have broached the topic tend to focus on South Africa’s labor movement and anti-apartheid struggle. Even less addressed is how social movements in various parts of the continent have affected each other. A continent-wide approach however shows that protest ...
  • September 13, 2018
    In order to analyze – and act upon – this great civilizational revolution, we need new conceptual tools. The present political and social sciences are wanting. They were developed in close symbiosis with industrial era mechanical “hard” sciences. This paper tries to contribute to the effort of building new foundations for the “digital” 21st century political and social sciences by tapping into cognitive sciences and Artificial Intelligence insights – particularly “neural networks” r ...