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Energetická dimenze vztahu Súdán-Jižní Súdán na prahu 21. století a její vliv na budoucí vývoj / The energy dimension of relationship between Sudan-South Sudan at the beginning of the 21st century and its impact on the future developmentDudová, Sabina January 2013 (has links)
The thesis deals with the analysis of the oil industry in Sudan and South Sudan in the 21st century. The first part follows up the role of oil in the African continent; the history of oil production, the rest is devoted to a more detailed analysis of the oil sector in Sudan or South Sudan after 2011. Then the characteristics of future scenarios are realized. The scenarios are affected by the civil war in the South Sudan and border disputes between the North and the South.
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Hybrid patches of commoning - Unpacking influences of the hydrosocial cycle on commoning in a downstream desert reclamation area : case study in Youssef El Seddik, Egypt / Hybrida utrymmen av kollektivt samarbete - Analys av influenser från den hydrosociala cykeln på kollektiva handlingar i ett nedströms nyodlat ökenområde : fallstudie i Youssef El Seddik, EgyptenHellström, Benjamin, Sultan, Leila January 2020 (has links)
Water stress is increasing globally, especially affecting arid regions of the world such as Egypt. Due to challenges related to intensifying effects of climate change and a rapidly growing population, the levels of and access to water is a continuous area of concern for the country – making it important to analyze how these water issues are managed. This study connects the hydrosocial cycle and commoning frameworks in analyzing how water is managed in a downstream, desert reclamation area in Fayoum, Egypt – and how this management, or lack thereof, affects the livelihoods of the people living there. In doing so, we examine how possible commoning practices are influenced by factors related to the hydrosocial cycle. Fieldwork has been conducted for this case study by holding participatory workshops, semi-structured interviews, and observations. Our findings imply that the hydrosocial cycle has shaped the management of water in our studied site, which has in turn affected the commoning practices that take place there. The low water levels and the saline quality of the water is what has created the prevalent forms of commoning that can be seen in the community. The presence of a local agricultural association has also influenced the commoning practices. The quality and levels of water in the area are in part managed by neighbors borrowing irrigation minutes from each other, and by collective olive harvest. To a lesser extent there are also instances of neighbors helping each other with agricultural work throughout the year, and sharing reservoirs. There are indications that these commoning practices play a part in sustaining livelihoods in the community. The commoning practices found in the studied site have emerged in a relatively new social context and can be characterized as context specific patches of commoning, occurring on the peripheries of hybrid institutions – that have largely been shaped by hydrosocial forces. As the hydrosocial cycle is ever-changing, these commoning practices will likely also come to change.
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Renewable energy in North Africa: Modeling of future electricity scenarios and the impact on manufacturing and employmentKost, Christoph Philipp 04 June 2015 (has links)
The transition of the North African electricity system towards renewable energy technologies is analyzed in this thesis. Large potentials of photovoltaics (PV), concentrating solar power (CSP) and onshore wind power provide the opportunity to achieve a long-term shift from conventional power sources to a highly interconnected and sustainable electricity system based on renewable energy sources (RES). A multi-dimensional analysis evaluates the economic and technical effects on the electricity market as well as the socio-economic impact on manufacturing and employment caused by the large deployment of renewable energy technologies.
The integration of renewable energy (RE) into the electricity system is modeled in a linear optimization model RESlion which minimizes total system costs of the long-term expansion planning and the hourly generation dispatch problem. With this model, the long-term portfolio mix of technologies, their site selection, required transmission capacities and the hourly operation are analyzed. The focus is set on the integration of renewable energy in the electricity systems of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and Egypt with the option to export electricity to Southern European countries. The model results of RESlion show that a very equal portfolio mix consisting of PV, CSP and onshore wind power is optimal in long-term scenarios for the electricity system. Until the year 2050, renewable energy sources dominate with over 70% the electricity generation due to their cost competiveness to conventional power sources. In the case of flexible and dispatchable electricity exports to Europe, all three RE technologies are used by the model at a medium cost perspective.
The socio-economic impact of the scenarios is evaluated by a decision model (RETMD) for local manufacturing and job creation in the renewable energy sector which is developed by incorporating findings from expert interviews in the RE industry sector. The electricity scenarios are assessed regarding their potential to create local economic impact and local jobs in manufacturing RE components and constructing RE power plants. With 40,000 to 100,000 new jobs in the RE sector of North African countries, scenarios with substantial RE deployment can provide enormous benefits to the labor market and lead to additional economic growth.
The deployment of renewable energy sources in North Africa is consequently accelerated and facilitated by finding a trade-off between an optimal technology portfolio from an electricity system perspective and the opportunities through local manufacturing. By developing two model approaches for evaluating the effects of renewable energy technologies in the electricity system and in the industrial sector, this thesis contributes to the literature on energy economics and energy policy for the large-scale integration of renewable energy in North Africa.:Abstract iii
Acknowledgement iv
Table of contents v
List of tables ix
List of figures xii
List of abbreviations xvi
1 Introduction 1
1.1 Renewable energy in North Africa 2
1.2 Research questions and aim of this thesis 3
1.2.1 Modeling of electricity systems 4
1.2.2 Modeling of manufacturing and employment impact 6
1.2.3 Optimal renewable energy scenarios 6
1.3 Related research 7
1.4 Structure of thesis 7
2 Modeling fundamentals for electricity systems with renewable energy sources 9
2.1 Energy system modeling 9
2.2 Electricity models 16
2.2.1 Classifications and taxonomy 17
2.2.2 Differences between operation models and planning models 20
2.2.3 Typical modeling approaches 21
2.3 Optimization models 23
2.3.1 Basic model structure 23
2.3.2 Objective functions of electricity models 24
2.3.3 Technical aspects of electricity systems as models constraints 26
2.3.4 Combining different objectives in energy scenarios 27
2.4 Models for high shares of renewable energy 28
2.5 Models for North African electricity systems 31
2.6 Conclusions for model development 34
3 Electricity system of North Africa 36
3.1 Market structure 36
3.2 National targets for renewable energy 40
3.2.1 Morocco 40
3.2.2 Algeria 41
3.2.3 Tunisia 42
3.2.4 Libya 42
3.2.5 Egypt 43
3.3 Long-term development of electricity demand 44
3.4 Electricity exports to Europe 47
3.5 Geopolitical risks for the electricity system 51
4 Development of the electricity market model RESlion 53
4.1 Model requirements and modeling goals 53
4.2 Modeling of renewable energy technologies 56
4.2.1 Onshore wind power plants and wind resources 59
4.2.2 PV power plants and solar resources 61
4.2.3 CSP plants and solar resources 63
4.2.4 Hydro power plants and energy storage systems 65
4.3 General model approach of RESlion 65
4.4 Model description of RESlion 69
4.4.1 Introduction to the model structure 69
4.4.2 Temporal coverage 70
4.4.3 Objective function 72
4.4.4 Technology independent model constraints 74
4.4.5 Regional electricity exchange: Transmission lines 76
4.4.6 Renewable energy technologies 78
4.4.7 Hydro and storage power plants 80
4.4.8 Uncertainty of input parameters and assumptions 81
4.5 Modeling of expansion planning 83
4.6 Modeling of detailed hourly generation dispatch 83
4.7 Extension options to a Mixed Integer Linear Programming model 84
4.8 Solver selection and implementation environment 85
5 Model-based analysis of future electricity scenarios for North Africa 86
5.1 Scenario assumptions 86
5.2 Scenario definition 89
5.3 Technical and economic input data 94
5.4 Model adjustment 99
5.4.1 Electricity generation in reference year 2010 99
5.4.2 Testing of results with detailed hourly generation dispatch 100
5.5 Electricity scenarios for North Africa by 2050 102
5.5.1 Development of the generation system 102
5.5.2 System and generation costs 106
5.5.3 Site selection of RES generation capacities 108
5.5.4 Regional transmission lines 114
5.5.5 Energy storage systems 118
5.5.6 Technology specific generation 119
5.5.7 CO2 emissions 126
5.6 Sensitivity analyses 126
5.6.1 Adaption of market conditions: Split of electricity markets 127
5.6.2 Technology focus 127
5.6.3 Adaption of cost trends for fossil fuels, transmission lines and storage systems 129
5.7 Technology specific findings for CSP, PV and wind power 131
5.7.1 Typical sites and locations for electricity generation from RES 131
5.7.2 Influence of wind speeds and solar irradiation 131
5.7.3 Interactions with conventional power plants 132
5.8 Electricity scenarios with export to Europe 133
5.9 Discussion of RESlion model and its results 139
6 Model development for socio-economic impact analysis 142
6.1 The idea of combining a cost-optimized electricity system with a socio-economic analysis 142
6.2 Literature review and terminology 145
6.3 Data acquisition and further studies 148
6.4 Model description of RETMD 151
6.4.1 Model objectives 151
6.4.2 Model structure and decision modeling 152
6.4.3 Model limitations and uncertainties 156
6.5 Data input of RETMD 157
6.5.1 Construction of reference power plants 157
6.5.2 Operation of reference power plants 159
6.5.3 Status quo of local manufacturing in recent RE projects 160
6.6 Sensitivity of RETMD on market size and know-how 161
6.7 Discussion of model achievements 163
7 Manufacturing and employment impact of optimized electricity scenarios 165
7.1 Demand scenarios for the RE markets from 2012 to 2030 165
7.2 Economic impact and employment creation 166
7.3 Technology specific development of local manufacturing 168
7.4 Country specific development of local manufacturing 172
7.5 Potentials of local manufacturing in each scenarios 174
7.6 Local economic impact 176
7.7 Local employment impact 177
7.8 Evaluation of scenario results 181
7.9 Electricity system analysis and RE manufacturing: Results and discussion of the combined analysis 183
8 Conclusions and outlook 186
8.1 Conclusion on model developments 186
8.2 Conclusion on renewable energy in North Africa 187
8.3 Outlook and further research 189
9 Bibliography 191
10 Appendix 210
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CRIME FICTION AS A LENS FOR POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CRITIQUE IN THE MODERN ARAB WORLD: ELIAS KHOURY’S <i>WHITE MASKS</i> AND YASMINA KHADRA’S <i>MORITURI</i>Rachel Hannah Hackett (10682463) 07 May 2021 (has links)
<p>This thesis
argues that <i>Morituri</i> by Yasmina Khadra and <i>White Masks</i> by Elias
Khoury use the genre of the detective novel as a pretext for social and
political critique of Algeria and Lebanon respectively. This thesis links the generic (crime
fiction) and the conceptual (Political and Social Critique in Modern Arab
World). While the
detective novel is traditionally thought of as a non-academic, entertaining
part of popular culture, the use of the genre to critique the failure of nation
building after colonization elevates the genre and transforms it from mere
entertainment to a more serious genre. Both novels are emblematic of a shift in
the use of the detective and crime novel to address the political disarray in
their respective states and the Arab world as a whole. As modern examples of
detective novels in the modern Arab world, <i>Morituri</i> and <i>White Masks</i>
transform the genre through their complex interweaving of aspects of the
popular genre of detective fiction with the more serious political novel. The
historical and political context of both countries at the time of the novels’
settings are an intrinsic part of understanding the crimes and the obfuscation
of the perpetrator. In both of these novels, the technical and generic aspects
are connected to the thematic, and the detective novel structure is not just
there for suspense and entertainment. Instead, this structure points to the
neocolonial system, benefitting the most powerful and the most affluent at the
expense of the weak, poor, and disadvantaged.</p>
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Bezpečnostní politika EU vůči Maghrebu: podpora demokracie nebo zajištění stability? / Security Policy of the EU towards the Maghreb: Promoting Democracy or Stability?Holík, Jiří January 2012 (has links)
This graduate thesis analyses the EU security policy towards the Maghreb between 2005 and 2010. It does so in order to ascertain to what extent the level of practical policy corresponds with the level of declarations. Also, by using the promotion of democratic governance in the Maghreb countries under the ENP as s case study, the thesis means to challenge the proposition that European Union can be described as a 'Normative Power'. First chapter briefly presents the concept of 'Normative Power Europe'. Following section looks at the European Security Strategy and localizes the primary position of the goal of democracy promotion in the document. Third part gives an overview of the European policy towards the Mediterranean under which EU relations with the Maghreb have been framed. Most attention is paid to the European Neighbourhood Policy. Next chapter examines the level of practical EU policy. It consists of three separate case studies of European policy towards Tunisia, Morocco and Libya between 2005 and 2010. The fifth and final part qualitatively analyses the way four factors (trade, energy, migration and terrorism) contributed to the structuring of relations of Tunisia, Morocco and Libya with Spain, France and Italy. The thesis arrives at the conclusion that while at the declaratory level the EU strives...
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The globalisation of universal human rights and the Middle EastHosseinioun, Mishana January 2014 (has links)
The goal of this study is to generate a more holistic picture of the diffusion and assimilation of universal human rights norms in diverse cultural and political settings such as the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). The overarching question to be investigated in this thesis is the relationship between the evolving international human rights regime and the emerging human rights normative and legal culture in the Middle East. This question will be investigated in detail with reference to regional human rights schemes such as the Arab Charter of Human Rights, as well as local human rights developments in three Middle Eastern states, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and the Islamic Republic of Iran. Having gauged the take-up of human rights norms on the ground at the local and regional levels, the thesis examines in full the extent of socialisation and internalisation of human rights norms across the Middle East region at large.
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Casablanca belongs to us : globalisation, everyday life and postcolonial subjectivity in Moroccan cinema since the 1990sBahmad, Jamal January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines the representations of Casablanca in Moroccan cinema and their articulation of postcolonial subjectivity since the 1990s. To overcome a deep economic recession and simmering social unrest in the early 1980s, Morocco embarked on a comprehensive programme of structural adjustment policies under the aegis of the International Monetary Fund. Market reforms ushered in novel forms of spatial development and social relations in Moroccan cities over the next decades. In the cultural field, a popular cinema emerged in the early 1990s and has projected the complex structures of everyday life in urban space. The New Urban Cinema (NUC) has anchored national cinema in the everyday life and affective economy of a society in transition. The country’s largest city, Casablanca, is the setting for some of NUC’s most original portrayals of the Moroccan subject under globalisation. Taking space, affect and violence as intertwined sites of film analysis, my research project closely examines the new forms of postcolonial subjectivity that have evolved in Morocco through this cinema. Twenty films are read against the backdrop of neoliberal Casablanca and the social, economic as well as political transformation of Morocco and the world under globalisation. The dissertation combines close textual analysis with a cultural studies perspective, which situates films in their historical contexts of production and reception in Morocco and beyond. Drawing on postcolonial, film and urban studies, my aim is to contribute to interdisciplinary scholarship on cinematic responses to neoliberal globalisation, and to a social history of contemporary Morocco.
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L'enseignement du berbère : analyse comparée Algérie/Maroc / Berber teaching : comparative analysis Algeria/MoroccoAbrous, Nacira 27 June 2017 (has links)
Notre recherche propose une analyse sociolinguistique comparée des contextes, des modalités de l’intégration du berbère dans l’enseignement en Algérie (de 1995 à 2015) et au Maroc (de 2003 à 2015) consécutives de modifications des politiques linguistiques institutionnelles. Ces transformations sont intervenues sur une période de temps assez courte (une décennie), pour réguler et/ou anticiper la pression revendicative. L’examen de chacun des champs considérés comporte chacun un volet descriptif et un volet analytique. En partant du constat empirique immédiat de l’existence de points de convergence et de divergence entre les deux pays dans cette « nouvelle politique scolaire berbère », nous proposons une description de la structuration des écoles, des choix de la langue à enseigner : sa standardisation-normativisation, sa codification graphique et les choix d'élaboration didactique retenus. La description confirme les continuités et les discontinuités entre les deux États. Notre objectif est de rechercher une signification sociolinguistique à cette offre éducative différenciée. Les sources et les matériaux diversifiés issus d’une investigation sur les deux terrains sont analysés dans une tentative comparative et évaluative transdisciplinaire, à la lumière de l’apport conceptuel : du champ des études berbères, de la sociolinguistique « périphérique », de l’aménagement linguistique et de la socio didactique. L’examen des données synchroniques et diachroniques et de matériaux institutionnels et extra institutionnels conduisent à identifier les niveaux de convergences et les divergence entre les deux États et d’affirmer le caractère institutionnalisé de la minoration du berbère. / Our work consists of a comparative sociolinguistic analysis of the contexts, methods of integration and implementation of Berber language teaching in Algeria (from 1995 to 2015) and Morocco (from 2003 to 2015) following changes to institutional linguistic policies.These changes were brought in, over quite a short period of time (a decade), to regulate and/or anticipate social pressure in favour of the introduction of Berber in state schools. The examination of each of the three contexts consists of : a descriptive and an analytical angles. Departing from the empirical observation of the existence of points of convergence and divergence between the two countries in this “new Berber education policy”, we describe the structuration of teaching, the choices in relation to which language to teach, its standardisation, its graphic codification, as well as the objectives and didactic techniques implemented. This description confirms and discerns the continuities and discontinuities between the two states’ experiences and language policies. Our objective has been to seek out a sociolinguistic signification to this differentiated education. Diverse sources and materials resulting from fieldwork in the two countries are analysed with the aim of creating a transdisciplinary evaluation in light of conceptual work developed in the field of Berber studies, namely “peripheral” sociolinguistics, « language planning » and institutional tools. The interrogation of synchronic and diachronic data allows us to identify the essential points of convergence and divergence between the two States and to affirm the institutionalised nature of the minoration of the Berber language. / Anadi-ya, d tazrawt d wesleḍ di tmettsnilest** tasmenyifant ɣef tegnatin d iberdan tuɣ Lezzayer d Lmerruk deg usekcem n uselmed n tmaziɣt ɣer iɣerbazen. Tagnit-a yewwi-tt ubeddel d-imlen tasertit d-iglan s tsertiyin tisnilsanin timaynutin.Tineḍra-ya myezwarent-d s wazal n 10 iseggasen. Usant-d ad semsawint annar n tutlayin neɣ ahat ad sifessent ddeṛk isers fell-asent umennuɣ d usuter isertanen n Imussuyen idlesanen imaziɣen. Ihi ad nessenqed 3 inurar di tezrawt-a. Yal annar ila sin iswiren : Aswir uglim* : seg wayen d yufraren deg wennar n unadi, iban-aɣ d kra n ukanzi d umgirredger snat agi n tmura, deg wayen umi neqqar « Tasertit tasegmant i tmaziɣt»**. Ad d-nessifer : asbeddi n uselmed, abraz n tutlayt, afran ugemmay d wamek ttwafernen isufar d iswiyen n uselmed. Aglam n yal annar isseflali-d ifṛez-d kra seg tmuɣliwin-nneɣ ɣef wayen issemlalen turmilin n uselmed di tmura-ya. Aswir usliḍ : Iswi ameqqran d-yufraren, d asegzi n inumak d lǧeṛṛa n wayen akk uqment tmura-a deg wennar n uselmed n tmaziɣt, ulamma mgarradent di kra n tsetwilin*. Nnnuda anamek imettilesi ila uselmed n tmaziɣt di yal tamurt, acimi d wamek d-myezgant tmura-ya. Isufar d isenfaṛen nesseqdec di tezrawt-nneɣ d ayen d-nhawec, d-nessukkes achal d aseggas aya. Nesbedd tazrawt-agi ɣef tezrawin tismazaɣin d wayen akk d nessmed si tmettsnilest tunnaḍt** akked tafernutlayt**. Nuna daɣen ayen akk d-iwwi umezruy, tasnamta*, tasertit d tantrupulujit akken ad aɣ-d-iban wadeg n tmaziɣt d wayen tt-issawden akka tella deg uselmed.Nessaweḍ, nessafer-d kra n yigmaḍ : tamaziɣt mazal d-teffiɣ seg waddad*-ines, mazal d tarbibt n iduba n tmura-ya. Anekcum is deg wennar uselmed ur yelli d asnerni i as d-yewwi, d asḍerref i tt-isḍerrif. S waya timura nessbent addag adday n tmaziɣt
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La traite des esclaves noirs en Lybie dans les temps modernes / the black slaves’ trade in Libya in the modern eraAbu alkhir, Saleh 24 May 2016 (has links)
Cette thèse, sur la traite des esclaves noirs en Libye, dans les temps modernes, en particulier aux XVIIIe et XIXe siècles, a nécessité une recherche à partir de questions telles que : quelles sont les origines et les catégories des esclaves noirs qui arrivèrent en Libye ? Les divers prix pratiqués ? Les stations commerçantes les plus importantes du Sahara ? Les routes caravanières empruntées pour le transport des esclaves vers l’Afrique du Nord et plus particulièrement la Libye ? La thèse porte sur les principaux marchés libyens, les méthodes d’achat et de vente, les prix des esclaves, les impôts, les douanes. La Libye a servi, en premier lieu, de plaque tournante pour l’exportation des esclaves vers d’autres destinations et notre étude s’est attachée à ses ports d’où partaient les esclaves en direction de l’Egypte, de l’Empire ottoman, du Levant et des pays du Maghreb. La thèse met aussi l’accent sur la vie sociale des esclaves, leurs rituels religieux, leurs traditions et coutumes, leur habitat, leurs relations avec leurs maîtres, leur intégration dans la communauté libyenne et musulmane jusqu’à en faire partie, le point de vue de la société libyenne sur ce phénomène de l’esclavage. La dernière partie de la thèse aborde la diminution du phénomène de l’esclavage en Libye, puis l’interdiction et l’abolition du commerce à partir de la pression internationale exercée sur l’Empire ottoman. Une évaluation est faite sur la qualité des mesures gouvernementales à cet égard, à travers un récit historique des évènements jusqu’à la fin du commerce à partir de l’occupation italienne, en 1911. / This thesis is about the black slaves’ trade in Libya in the modern era especially in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It illustrates a range of research issues such as, the sources of black slaves which came to Libya, its types and prices, the important commercial stations in the desert, the routes of the caravans which carried the slaves to North Africa and to Libya in particular. The research study comes across the most important markets on the Libyan soil, the methods of purchasing and buying, the slaves’ prices, the taxes and the customs. Hence, Libya was the area of re-exporting the slaves in the first place, the theses will mention the important exporting harbours and the important destinations such as Egypt, the Ottoman State (Turkey), and the Levant and the Maghreb countries. The thesis extends its scope to cover the social life of the slaves, their religious rituals, their customs and traditions, their houses, their relationships with their masters, the perception of the Libyan society to the slave phenomenon until they become an important component of the Libyan society and the Islamic societies in general. The last part of the thesis deals with the history of abolition of the slave trade and the disappearance of the slave phenomenon totally in Libya. This will be done by following the sequence of events starting with the international pressure on the Ottoman Empire for the abolition of slavery, the assessment of the seriousness of the governmental measures (procedures) and recalling the historical events until the end of the slave trade by the Italian occupation to Libya in 1911.
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Desertec und der arabisch-frankophone Maghreb am Fallbeispiel: Marokko / Desertec and the Frankophone Maghreb, Focus: Marocco / Desertec et le Maghreb Francophone, Exemple: Le MarocFrieß, Daniel 09 July 2013 (has links)
Die Staatsexamensarbeit befasst sich sowohl mit den Potentialen, als auch mit den möglichen Problemen des Desertec Projekts im französischsprachigen Norden Afrikas. Der Autor beleuchtet im ersten Teil die Potentiale des Projekts für von einem kultur-, politik-, sozialwissenschaftlichen Standpunkt. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit setzt sich der Autor intensiv mit der Frage nach der Kritik der neokolonialistischen Bestrebungen der Projektinitiatoren auseinander. Darüber hinaus beleuchtet er die Kommunikationsstrategie der Desertec Foundation näher und legt das interkulturelle Potential dieses Unterfangens dar. Daran schließt sich ein Überblick über die französischen, marokkansichen und deutschen Pressestimmen im Zeitraum von 2009 - 2012 zum Desertec Projekt an. Den Abschluss bildet eine Standortanalyse mit dem Fokus auf den von der AQIM ausgehenden Terrorismus und der Korruption vor Ort. / The author of the exam thesis „Das Desertec Projekt und der Arabisch-Frankophone Maghreb am Beispiel Marokko“ discusses various important cultural aspects of the implementation of the mega-project Desertec in the francophone area of North Africa. In this thesis, the author puts the advantages presented by the Desertec Foundation into perspective and discusses possible impediments from a cultural point of view. The first part of the paper covers the topics of solar powered drinking water abstraction as a possibility to meet local needs and Desertec as a promoter of social stability and economic development in the MENA region. The second part is concerned with a discussion of alleged neo-colonial intentions of the companies supporting the Desertec project as well as its management. Moreover, the author discusses the communication strategy of the project and the influence of intercultural aspects on the success of the Desertec vision. Furthermore, the thesis contains a review on press reactions on the topic in the period of 2009 – 2012 and a brief location study discussing the topic of terrorism and corruption in the Maghreb region. The author comes to the conclusion that a mega-project like Desertec cannot solely rely on economic facts and engineering ingenuity, but has to take all cultural points into account and make use of the synergetic effect in order to lead this project to success.
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