EUME
2022/ 2023

Kaoutar Ghilani

Failing the Nation? The Rise and Fall of Arabisation in the Maghreb

is a EUME Fellow at the Forum Transregionale Studien during the academic year 2022/23. She received her doctorate in Middle Eastern Studies from the University of Oxford as an Ertegun scholar (2022) for her thesis “Discourses of Failure: Arabisation and Nation-Building in Morocco.” She also holds a Bachelor’s degree Cum Laude in Social Sciences and Middle Eastern Studies (2015) and a Research Master’s degree Cum Laude in Political Theory (2017) from Sciences Po Paris. She was a tutor of ‘Politics in the Middle East’ at Oxford and a visiting researcher at the Centre Jacques Berque in Morocco. Her work has been published in the British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, the Bulletin of Francophone Postcolonial Studies, Review of Middle East Studies, and the Journal of North African Studies. She is currently preparing a monograph on language politics and nation-building in the Maghreb.

Failing the Nation? The Rise and Fall of Arabisation in the Maghreb

Kaoutar Ghilani’s research investigates the disavowal by Maghrebi postcolonial states (Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia) of a main element of their decolonial nation-building: Arabisation. Replacing French with Standard Arabic in the public space after independence, Arabisation was a key nationalist demand representing an endogenous modernity project for the Maghreb that was distinct from both the West’s and the Middle East’s. Once a largely consensual — or at least not contested — policy associated with decolonisation, Arabisation has nevertheless grown increasingly controversial, especially in education, as claims of its ‘failure’ poured from across the political spectrum. While the discourse bracketing Arabisation with ‘failure’ has entrenched itself in the public sphere, no formal evaluation of the policy has been ever conducted. In 2019, Morocco and Algeria announced a turn towards French and English, respectively, in their education systems. How has the discourse on the ‘failure of Arabisation’ become dominant in the Maghreb and what implications does it have for nation-building? During her time as a EUME fellow, Kaoutar Ghilani aims to expand on her doctoral thesis to write a monograph on the political history of the discourse on the ‘failure’ of Arabisation in the Maghreb. The book traces the circulation of the idea of the Arabisation’s ‘failure’ at a regional level, analyses the political, cultural, economic, and social reasons that have allowed this discourse to become dominant, and studies the ways it has impacted Moroccan, Algerian, and Tunisian nation-building.