This document is a fully written paper that focus on the main institutions and actors that decide on, influence, and implement EU foreign policy making vis-à-vis Morocco. We wonder to what extent is the intergovernmental relationship between the Cherifian Kingdom and the European Union related to the participation of the European institutions in the durability of a bilateral agreement process?
We will first see the institutions that allowed the implementation of strategic agreements between the two geographical regions and then the current actors and institutions playing a key role in the sustainability of this issue.
[...] At the same time, the European Council rejected, on 1 October 1987, Morocco's candidacy for membership of the European Union, based on Article 49 of the Treaty on European Union, which requires the candidate to be a "European" state. However, a turning point was made in 1996 with the adoption of an Association Agreement which came into force in 2000. It was part of the Barcelona Declaration of 1995 establishing the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership. The Association Agreement provides a framework for relations between the two parties. [...]
[...] The distribution of European credits granted since 2007 testifies, as such, to a reorientation of aid in support of the democratic reforms undertaken since 2011. At the institutional level, the Advanced Statute has led to a number of new developments: the organization of a European Union - Morocco summit in 2010, consultation mechanisms at the ministerial level, Morocco's invitation on the sidelines of ministerial meetings or of certain groups of work of the Council of the European Union. Morocco is also allowed to participate in certain EU programs and agencies set up for the Member States of the European Union, such as Eurojust, the Air Safety Agency or the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drugs. [...]
[...] This is for example the case concerning a decision on Western Sahara. Indeed, on November the Court of Justice of the European Union declared that Morocco had no sovereignty over Western Sahara, a restrictive and restrictive air agreement between the EU and Morocco having entered into force. Therefore, this decision reflects a real challenge for the European institution in the specificity of the municipality of Morocco which is maintained, it being understood that it refers to the geographical area in which the Kingdom of Morocco exercises the fullness of the powers which correspond to the rulers of all international law, to the exclusion of all others. [...]
[...] Indeed, the parliamentarian institution of the Union worked in order to harmonized the foreign policy of the Union and let Morocco speak to one interlocutor. B. Current strategic agreements a. European programmes: the example of the Common Foreign and Security Policy : its institutions and actors Separated from only 13 kilometers of the continent, the European stowage of Morocco is geographically indisputable. The weight of the diaspora and the cultural and historical links with the Old Continent are well established. [...]
[...] # European Commission and High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, A new response to a changing Neighbourhood, Joint Communication to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, COM(2011) 303 final, Brussels # Kourtelis, Christos, Assessing EU Aid to the `Southern Partners' of the European Neighbourhood Policy: Who Benefits from the Reforms in the Agricultural and Industrial Sector?, Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, 8(2015)2, 190-211. Holden, Patrick (2010), Developing Polyarchy? [...]
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