Britton, Hannah EButtorff, Gail JBadran, Sammy Z2019-09-062019-09-062018-08-312018http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:16039https://hdl.handle.net/1808/29556This dissertation aims to understand why protests lessen when they do by investigating how and why social movements demobilize. I do this by questioning the causal link between consistent state polices (concessions or repression) and social movement demobilization. My interviews with the February 20 Movement, the main organizer of mass protests in Morocco during the Arab Spring, reveals how ideological differences between leftist and Islamist participants led to the group’s eventual halt of protests. During my fieldwork, I conducted 46 semi-structured elite interviews with civil society activists, political party leaders, MPs, and independent activists throughout Morocco. My interviews demonstrate that the February 20 Movement was initially united, but that this incrementally changed following the King’s mixed-policy of concessions and repression. The King’s concessionary policies convinced society that demands were being met and therefore led to the perception that the February 20 Movement was no longer needed, while repression highlighted internal divides. The King’s calculated mixed-policy approach killed this social movement by delegitimizing it, in addition to internally fracturing it. This dissertation will show how the February 20 Movement became a divided movement that could not uniformly respond to a series of concessions and repression.164 pagesenCopyright held by the author.Political scienceArab SpringDemobilizationFebruary 20 MovementMoroccoProtestsSocial MovementsDemobilization in Morocco: The Case of The February 20 MovementDissertationopenAccess