Since the 1970s, it has no longer been the case that Moroccan migrants are single young men who travel abroad to work.
‘In the spirit of continuity’ has been the unexpressed motto which could be applied to define the will of the new Moroccan monarch since his ascension to the throne in 1999.
Immigration in the Mediterranean area is a constant which defies evaluation using time parameters.
Europe awoke from its dream of stability and well-being on that day in 1992 when families and neighbours on its Balkan threshold declared cruel war on each other.
The fifth enlargement of the European Union, which will take place in May 2004 with the incorporation of ten new states, has opened a veritable Pandora’s box.
Like many other countries in Europe and in its peripheral areas, Turkey has to deal today with a growing irregular influx of foreign nationals to the country.
The potential of Cultural Tourism in Southern Europe and the Mediterranean has not been fully realised until now.
The Euro-Mediterranean area has had first-hand experience of the negative repercussions of the Anglo-American war in Iraq in the Spring of 2003.
Since the 1980s, first the North European countries and then the countries with more recent immigration, have come to realise that immigration from Muslim countries is a long-lasting phenomenon.
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