NCJ Number
              198373
          Journal
  Judicial Explorations (Justitiele verkenningen) Volume: 27 Issue: 5 Dated: 2001 Pages: 87-98
Date Published
  2001
Length
              12 pages
          Annotation
              This article describes the profound impact of major criminal income-generating activities on the region of Northern Morocco.
          Abstract
              This article provides an overview of the history of the Northern Mediterranean part of Morocco, particularly the mountainous provinces of Al Hoceima, Nador, and the province of Oujda which borders on Algeria. It is from this region that nearly three quarters of the immigrant community of approximately 300,000 Moroccans in the Netherlands originate. The authors describe this region as being a buffer zone and having been a Spanish protectorate. It was primarily a berber speaking population and  one of the poorest and most marginal areas of Morocco when massive labor migration began towards Europe in 1960. Now, 40 years later, large amounts of money circulate in the region due to the migrants in Europe sending money back home. This has fueled large scale smuggling, human trafficking, and increased the production of marijuana and its distribution in Europe. The profound and irreversible socio-economic and political impacts of these activities on the region are described. A list of reference sources is included.
          