%0 Article %A Ruiz Ruiz, Juan José %D 2018 %T Las constituciones de las primaveras árabes y su implementación: el caso de Marruecos %U https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=6384425 %X A half decade since the Arab Spring erupted, efforts to put these political and constitutional processes into proper prospective are becoming more prevalent. It cannot be denied, however, that this alleged new democratising wave remains provisional in many ways. While the new Constitution emerging from the Tunisian spring only began to take effect from January 2014, in others countries we can openly speak of the ‘autumn season’ of the Arab Spring, an expression that seeks to capture the degeneration into authoritarianism – such as in the Egyptian case. The same cannot be said in the case of Morocco which, among all the constitutional processes opened, was the first to be concluded and to have reached a mature level, following several years of development of the new constitutional text. This essay focuses on the constitutional development introduced by the new organic legislation, including regarding representative institutions, the government, the judiciary, the jurisdiction of the constitution, advanced regionalisation, and new mechanisms of participation.