When EU Law meets Arab Law: Assessment of Anti-Corruption Law in Morocco and Some Proposed Amendments
Bryane Michael (Linacre College) and Abdelaziz Nouaydi (Mohammed V University)
Authors registered in the RePEc Author Service: Professor Bryane Michael
QEH Working Papers from Queen Elizabeth House, University of Oxford
Abstract:
This article reviews the present state of the adoption of anti-corruption legal provisions usually adopted in EU (or candidate) countries in Morocco. Morocco lags behind many countries in its adoption of anti-corruption legislation and the recently established Central Agency of the Prevention of Corruption is unlikely to succeed in speeding up the adoption of these measures. English language translations of a number of Moroccan anti-corruption legal instruments are presented and amendments to these legal instruments are recommended (based on international best practice) in order to increase the likely effectiveness of Moroccan law enforcement institutions in fighting corruption.
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