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Sustainability Governance in Morocco: A Narrative Review of Legislative, Institutional, and Organizational Practices

Author

Listed:
  • Amina Meskaoui

    (LERSEM Laboratory, National School of Business and Management (ENCG), University of Chouaib Doukkali, El Jadida 24000, Morocco)

  • Adil El Amri

    (LERSEM Laboratory, National School of Business and Management (ENCG), University of Chouaib Doukkali, El Jadida 24000, Morocco)

  • Abdelhak Sahib Eddine

    (LERSEM Laboratory, National School of Business and Management (ENCG), University of Chouaib Doukkali, El Jadida 24000, Morocco)

Abstract

Morocco has developed one of the most comprehensive sustainability governance architectures among middle-income emerging economies, yet the relationship between its formal regulatory ambition and on-the-ground implementation effectiveness remains poorly understood. This narrative literature review provides an integrated, critically analytical account of Morocco’s sustainability governance system, organised around three interlocking dimensions: (i) a progressively strengthened legislative corpus anchored by the 2011 Constitution and Framework Law 99-12; (ii) a portfolio of national sustainability strategies aligning domestic policy with Paris Agreement commitments, Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs); and (iii) corporate sustainability practices driven by regulatory obligations, international supply chain pressures, and ESG disclosure norms. Drawing on 124 sources, comprising 62 peer-reviewed articles, 38 legislative texts, and 24 institutional reports, and applying institutional isomorphism theory as an integrating analytical lens, the review advances three theoretical propositions concerning the conditions under which formal governance architectures translate into effective sustainability outcomes. It further proposes a validated conceptual framework and develops a comparative positioning of Morocco against peer economies (Tunisia, Egypt, South Africa, and Turkey). Critical implementation gaps are identified in enforcement capacity, SME integration, sustainability data infrastructure, and green finance, contributing a balanced and evidence-grounded assessment of Morocco’s sustainability transition. These findings offer actionable insights for policymakers, regulators, and business leaders operating in the Moroccan and broader African context.

Suggested Citation

  • Amina Meskaoui & Adil El Amri & Abdelhak Sahib Eddine, 2026. "Sustainability Governance in Morocco: A Narrative Review of Legislative, Institutional, and Organizational Practices," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(12), pages 1-23, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:12:p:6360-:d:1972646
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