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Searching for a Different Future: The Rise of a Global Middle Class in Morocco
Contributor(s): Cohen, Shana (Author)
ISBN: 0822333511     ISBN-13: 9780822333517
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $94.95  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: August 2004
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: "Shana Cohen is making a significant contribution to understandings of how insertion into the world economy feels to those on the global margins and how their search for a new form of identity shapes their relations to religion, the state, and each other. This is not only an important book but one with literary value as well: we come as close as we can to understanding individual struggles and the resulting complications."--Miguel Centeno, Princeton University

""Searching for a Different Future" is superb. Shana Cohen's work provides an outstanding example for all scholars who take seriously the productive potential of work that is at once theoretical and empirical, objectivist and subjectivist, economically sophisticated and culturally savvy, regionally situated and unabashedly global."--Jonathan Cutler, coeditor of "Post-Work: The Wages of Cybernation"

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science | Globalization
- History | Africa - North
- Social Science | Social Classes & Economic Disparity
Dewey: 305.550
LCCN: 2004005067
Physical Information: 0.68" H x 5.98" W x 9.52" (0.89 lbs) 192 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - North Africa
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
By examining how neoliberal economic reform policies have affected educated young adults in contemporary Morocco, Searching for a Different Future posits a new socioeconomic formation: the global middle class. During Morocco's postcolonial period, from the 1950s through the 1970s, development policy and nationalist ideology supported the formation of a middle class based on the pursuit of education, employment, and material security. Neoliberal reforms adopted by Morocco since the early 1980s have significantly eroded the capacity of the state to nurture the middle class, and unemployment and temporary employment among educated adults has grown. There is no longer an obvious correlation between the best interests of the state and those of the middle-class worker. As Shana Cohen demonstrates, educated young adults in Morocco do not look toward the state for economic security and fulfillment but toward the diffuse, amorphous global market.

Cohen delves into the rupture that has occurred between the middle class, the individual, and the nation in Morocco and elsewhere around the world. Combining institutional economic analysis with cultural theory and ethnographic observation including interviews with seventy young adults in Casablanca and Rabat, she reveals how young, urban, educated Moroccans conceive of their material, social, and political conditions. She finds that, for the most part, they perceive improvement in their economic and social welfare apart from the types of civic participation commonly connected with nationalism and national identity. In answering classic sociological questions about how the evolution of capitalism influences identity, Cohen sheds new light on the measurable social and economic consequences of globalization and on its less tangible effects on individuals' perception of their place in society and prospects in life.