YC

Y. Chergui

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A Traveling Market as an Agent of Resilience and Change in Borderscapes

Master thesis (2024) - Y. Chergui, J.A. Kuijper, P. Medici, J.M.K. Hanna
This thesis challenges the political imagination of the border as a fixed structure, aiming to change the way the public thinks about and interacts with borderscapes. It explores how borderscapes, particularly those between Morocco and Algeria, serve as platforms for showcasing state identity and ideology, while simultaneously becoming spaces where border communities question and redefine these ideologies.

Research shows that despite the border closure between Algeria and Morocco, border communities remain connected through informal cross-border trade. These communities continuously find ways to cross the border to meet their needs, creating new opportunities for social and economic growth. This impacts local markets and ways of living, fundamentally challenging our understanding of borderscapes.

Taking the informal as inspiration for rethinking urban spaces, the project proposes dynamic design strategies for redefining the borderscape, using Oujda, a city in northeastern Morocco near the Algerian border, as a case study. It builds on the existing politics of tolerance, fostering the creation of self-organized settlements along an abandoned railroad that once connected Algeria and Morocco. The long-term vision is for these growing settlements near the border to lead to the gradual reopening of the border, with a traveling market serving as a connector and an agent of resilience and change in borderscapes. ...

The rise of Northeastern Morocco through the lens of Oujda

Student report (2023) - Y. Chergui, J.M.K. Hanna
Oujda, situated in the Northeastern region (Oriental) near the Algerian border, has a historical connection to Algeria that is stronger than its connection to the western regions of its own country. However, a difficult border situation has existed between Oujda and Algeria since 1994 due to escalating tensions. This border location has impacted Oujda throughout its long history, which exists for over a thousand years. The effects of this were clearly visible after the French colonization of Algeria in 1830 and Tunisia in 1881, which led to the colonization of Morocco. Morocco supported the Algerian resistance against the French government, which resulted in the expansion of the French protectorate in the ‘Maghrib’. Independence (1956) resulted in the reconstruction of national identity and post-colonial developments in Northeastern Morocco, which included the creation of new infrastructure projects and boundaries. Yet it had to deal with underinvestment during independence, as development efforts focused on Morocco’s economic centers such as Casablanca and Rabat. The Northeastern region's development has been significantly influenced by transborder interactions with Algeria and Spain. Illicit cross-border trade between local communities within and outside the country has helped to boost the regional economy over time. Legal trade traffic could only be done by air or sea, leading to new investments in infrastructure and technology to support the increasing demand for trade and commerce. Morocco's once-neglected eastern region has already developed into a more resilient region than before, with visible growth and expansion of the city and its surrounding areas. ...