Morocco

Morocco, agricultural workers, worker rights, unions, Solidarity Center

In Morocco, the Solidarity Center builds the capacity of workers and local unions through leadership development and advocacy for the rights of women, including agricultural workers. Credit: Solidarity Center/Zineb Arraki

The Solidarity Center works closely with our partners, the Democratic Labor Confederation (CDT) and the Moroccan Labor Union (UMT), to improve the wages and working conditions for precarious workers in the country’s agriculture and services sectors. Together with our union and community allies, the Solidarity Center also holds popular education and awareness trainings to help empower working women, and to support trade unions in representing marginalized workers in the private and public sectors, including workers with disabilities.

By building the capacity of workers and local unions through leadership development and advocacy for the rights of women and young workers in the workplace, these programs successfully translate into real economic and social gains—such as the first-ever collective agreement for farm workers in the Meknes region that includes stability in employment through job creation and job sustainability. The pact also assists temporary workers in becoming permanent workers, expands bonuses to temporary workers and ensures training, especially for women, so they can access higher paid jobs previously reserved for men.

Morocco has not ratified International Labor Organization Convention 87 on the Freedom of Association and Right to Collective Bargaining, and the International Trade Union Confederation’s annual survey of trade union rights notes Morocco heavily curtails worker freedoms. Union organizing and the right to strike is particularly challenging, with the persistence of a legislation that “criminalizes union work” through Article 288 of the country’s penal code.

Media Contact

Vanessa Parra
Campaign and Media Communications Director

[email protected]

 

Workers Protest Morocco’s Moves to Limit Strikes

Workers in Morocco are protesting unilateral moves by the government to restrict strikes and limit other worker freedoms and are collecting signatures against a draft bill, now in parliament. “The path the government wishes to follow by introducing this legislation on...

Teacher Protests for Decent Jobs: Key for All Moroccans

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The Benefits of Collective Bargaining for Women: A Case Study of Morocco

This study by the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and Solidarity Center finds women workers in Morocco’s fertile Meknes region are making big gains in gender equality on the job through their union, the Confédération Démocratique du Travail (CDT)....
Workers Protest Morocco’s Moves to Limit Strikes

Workers Protest Morocco’s Moves to Limit Strikes

Workers in Morocco are protesting unilateral moves by the government to restrict strikes and limit other worker freedoms and are collecting signatures against a draft bill, now in parliament. “The path the government wishes to follow by introducing this legislation on...

Teacher Protests for Decent Jobs: Key for All Moroccans

Teacher Protests for Decent Jobs: Key for All Moroccans

Recent massive teacher protests in Morocco demanding the government create permanent employment contracts is not an issue confined to the education sector—the extent to which decent jobs are available affects the future of the country, say leaders of the Democratic...

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