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Abstract

This study examines the provisions of Article 31 of the Moroccan Constitution of 1972 in relation to treaty law. It analyzes the constitutional allocation of powers in the negotiation, ratification, and approval of international agreements, and discusses the categories of treaties that require prior legislative authorization. The article places the Moroccan constitutional framework in comparative perspective and evaluates its ambiguities regarding simplified agreements, parliamentary control, and the place of treaties within the domestic legal order. It thus sheds light on the relationship between constitutional law and international commitments in Morocco.

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