The article examines the general features of Moroccan constitutionalism, which is characterized, unlike other constitutions of Arab monarchies, by the constitutionalization of permission for the existence of political parties and the Constitutional Court, while officially establishing Islam as the state religion and Muslim law as the basis of the legal system of the state. The features of the Constitution of Morocco, its main characteristics, which reveal the principles of building a system of power in the specified state, the state of human rights, and other nuances, are clarified. It is shown that the constitutional order of the Kingdom of Morocco is established and regulated by the Constitution of Morocco. It is characterized by orientation towards Western legal systems, consolidation of the completeness and diversity of national identity and indivisibility of sovereignty, separation of powers under a monarchical form of government, proclamation of Morocco as a constitutional monarchy, a democratic state with a parliamentary form of government and a secular system of government, consolidation of human rights and their guarantees, territorial integrity with a combination of guaranteeing local self-government and improving regionalization, proclamation of Islam as the state religion while simultaneously guaranteeing citizens freedom of religion, the presence of democratic institutions, primarily the Constitutional Court of Morocco, permission for the existence of political parties, consolidation of Muslim law as the basis of the legal system of the state. It is highlighted that the Kingdom of Morocco is the only fully sovereign state that belongs to the Greater Maghreb and adheres to its strategic goal, in particular, to prohibit and combat any kind of discrimination on the basis of sex, race, religion, cultural values, social and religious affiliation, language, disability and other personal circumstances. It is shown that the state strives to achieve equal rights for men and women, their participation in political, social and cultural life. It has been proven that, despite the holding of free elections and multi-party system, it is the monarch who plays the leading role in the exercise of power in the state, and the Constitution has no place for real guarantees of the enshrined rights and freedoms of man and the procedure for their implementation.
О. В. Зінченко (Sat,) studied this question.