Archives for October 2007

Rule of Law and Search for Justice in Afghanistan

Leigh Toomey and J Alexander Thier, '', , 31 October 2007.

ABSTRACT: "A legitimate, functioning and coherent justice system is urgently needed to establish peace and stability in post-Taliban Afghanistan. After three decades of war, continued insecurity, endemic corruption, and lack of resources hobble the formal justice...

Read the post »


Afghan Negotiations: Fairy Tale in the Making?

Daily Estimate Prakhar Sharma, 'Afghan Negotiations: Fairy Tale in the Making?', Daily Estimate, 31 October 2007.

EXCERPT: "Afghanistan is a multi-ethnic society. Pashtuns make up roughly 39 percent of Afghanistan's population. Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks, Turkmen and Baloch are the other key ethnicities in Afghanistan. Many of these non-Pashtuns suspect that this effort towards negotiating with the Taliban is about expanding Pakistan's and pro-Pakistan...

Read the post »


Afghanistan Human Development Report 2007 Now Available

Afghanistan Human Development Report 2007The full text of the Afghanistan Human Development Report 2007 is [PDF].

Click for the Monitor's original post (27 September 2007).

A of Afghanistan's Millennium Development Goals has been added to the Monitor's '' page.

ABSTRACT: "The 2007 Afghanistan Human Development Report: Bridging Modernity and Tradition - the Rule of Law and the Search for Justice builds on the 2004...

Read the post »


UNHCR Suspends Afghan Repatriation Effort Until 2008

Unhcrlogo 'Afghanistan-Pakistan: UNHCR UNHCR Suspends Afghan Repatriation Effort', Integrated Regional Information Networks, 31 October 2007.

"The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has temporarily suspended its voluntary Afghan repatriation programme from Pakistan for the winter... More than 3.2 million Afghans have returned to their homeland from Pakistan since the programme first began in March 2002 - one of the largest efforts of its kind for the...

Read the post »


US Drug War Endangers Allied Soldiers

Australian Mark Dodd, 'US Drug War Endangers Diggers', The Australian, 31 October 2007.

"A US anti-narcotics program in Afghanistan has raised tensions, undermined security and endangered Australian and Dutch soldiers' lives, a respected international foreign policy think tank has warned.

The Senlis Council claims the US Government brushed aside Australian and Dutch concerns to ram through an ill-conceived poppy eradication program in Oruzgan...

Read the post »


Private Military Contractors Also Creating Problems in Afghanistan

World Politics Review Carl Robichaud, 'Private Military Contractors Also Creating Problems in Afghanistan', World Politics Review, 30 October 2007.

"After the Sept. 16 Blackwater scandal, which drew unprecedented attention to the role played by private security contractors (PSCs) in Iraq, these firms have increasingly come under scrutiny in other theaters of war, such as Afghanistan. But while efforts in Afghanistan to rein in PSCs seem to parallel those...

Read the post »


Afghan Insurgency Fragmenting

'', The Economist, 25 October 2007 [Subscription required]

"The [Afghan] insurgency now has more clearly the form of a single, loosely co-ordinated insurrection spanning western Pakistan and southern and eastern Afghanistan. NATO is publicly divided. The Taliban, too, are fragmented. Far from being the monolithic Islamists they were in 2001, they now span various groups with differing motivations....

Read the post »


Third World Quarterly Deniz Kandiyoti, 'Between the Hammer and the Anvil: Post-conflict Reconstruction, Islam and Women's Rights', Third World Quarterly, Volume 28, Issue 3 April 2007, pages 503 - 517.

ABSTRACT: "This paper argues that gender issues are becoming politicised in novel and counterproductive ways in contexts where armed interventions usher in new blueprints for governance and 'democratisation'. Using illustrations from constitutional and electoral...


Weak States, State Failure, and Terrorism

Terrorism and Political Violence Edward Newman, "Weak States, State Failure, and Terrorism", Terrorism and Political Violence, Volume 19, Issue 4 December 2007 , pages 463 - 488. [Subscription Required]

ABSTRACT: "It is common to hear the assertion that weak or failed states are fertile ground for terrorism. Yet terrorist groups have emerged from, and operated within, countries which have strong, stable states and a variety of systems of government. Terrorist...

Read the post »


Training Foreign Police: A Missing Aspect of U.S. Security Assistance to Counterinsurgency

Comparative Strategy Walter C. Ladwig III, 'Training Foreign Police: A Missing Aspect of U.S. Security Assistance to Counterinsurgency', Comparative Strategy, Volume 26, Issue 4 July 2007, pages 285 - 293. [Subscription required]

ABSTRACT: "The lack of an institutional capacity and a legal authority to train foreign police forces is undercutting U.S. security assistance in the war on terror. From Iraq to Afghanistan to the Philippines, effective police...

Read the post »


12345
Subscribe:
Newsletter eNewsletters   |   RSS RSS Feeds