Scenarios about 'North Africa'
A region encompassing the northern portion of the African continent, including Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt. North Africa has been a crossroads of civilizations throughout history, influenced by Phoenicians, Romans, Arabs, Ottomans, and European colonial powers. Its strategic position between the Mediterranean, Middle East, and sub-Saharan Africa makes it crucial in alternate history scenarios involving Mediterranean power struggles, Islamic history, or colonial divergences.
What If Algeria Diversified Beyond Oil and Gas Earlier?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Algeria implemented economic diversification away from hydrocarbon dependency in the 1980s, potentially transforming North Africa's largest country into a regional economic powerhouse with greater stability and prosperity.
What If Casablanca Developed Different Industrial Policies?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Morocco's economic hub pursued an alternative industrial development path in the post-colonial era, potentially reshaping North Africa's economic landscape and global trade patterns.
What If Libya Transitioned to Democracy Successfully?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Libya's 2011 revolution led to a stable, democratic state instead of civil war and chaos, potentially transforming North Africa's political landscape and refugee dynamics.
What If Marrakech Implemented Different Tourism Management?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Marrakech adopted sustainable tourism practices earlier, transforming its urban development, cultural preservation, and economic resilience in North Africa.
What If Oran Developed Different Maritime Industries?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the Algerian port city of Oran pursued a different path of maritime development, transforming North African economic dynamics and Mediterranean power relations.
What If The Arab Spring Led to Stable Democracies?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the popular uprisings of 2010-2012 successfully transformed the Middle East and North Africa into a region of stable democratic states, fundamentally altering global geopolitics and regional development.