The Moroccan landscape is rapidly transforming under the repeated assaults of galloping urbanization. This phenomenon, accelerated by socio-economic changes, has reached spectacular proportions as illustrated by the new faces of the Kingdom's major cities. Urban planners and architects are renewing and often disrupting the configuration of urban sites. Cities now extend both in surface area, gradually absorbing agricultural land, and in height, raising buildings ever higher. Faced with these transformations, the legal landscape is also evolving. Immovable property rights are shaken by an Administration that finds in urban planning and construction regulations indispensable instruments for a coherent urban policy. Territorial planning and urban planning rights are enriched daily with new institutions and techniques, giving public law a dynamism contrasted with the stasis of private law.
Hervé Parcheminal (Sat,) studied this question.
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