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Afghanistan and Conflict and security

Afghanistan
  • Capital: Kabul
  • Population: 29121286
  • Size: 647500.0 Km2

Check the most recent online additions, updated daily.

Content from selected partners can be found by following the relevant links in the central panel below - or check out our editor's selection of the best sector specific information from other websites.

The BLDS conflict collection
The BLDS conflict collection
Search for the latest conflict-related print documents on this country from the British Library for Development Studies collection

Latest from Eldis conflict and security


Items 161 to 168 of 168

Political risks of military intervention in Afghanistan
Forum on Early Warning and Early Response, 2001
Overview and analysis of the range of measures taken by the anti-terrorist alliance, the implications of these for regional stability in the Caucasus, Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and West Africa, as well as potential glo...
Overview of possible responses to US/Afghanistan terrorism attacks
Forum on Early Warning and Early Response, 2001
Reviews the shortcomings in the most likely approaches, and regional and global implications of any U.S.-NATO campaign against terrorism Five key messages follow from the analysis: The failure to recognise that t...
Concerted long-term efforts to stabilise Central Asia politically and economically are vital
International Crisis Group, 2001
This article dicusses the impact of the military effort on Afghanistan on the five Central Asian nations (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan). The article indicates that: Central Asia...
External interventions have been based on poor analysis, which have fuelled rather than mitigated tensions
M. Fielden; J. Goodhand / Institute for Development Policy and Management, Manchester, 2001
This paper aims to contribute to an improved understanding of 1) the dynamics of the Afghan conflict 2) the interests and agendas of those involved in the fighting 3) the social and political transformation that has occurred in Afghanistan ...
Relations between Central Asian states have been mediated by conflict rather than cooperation
International Crisis Group, 2001
This article indicates after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the independent states that emerged in Central Asia have been marked more by confrontation than cooperation. This is particularly emphasised in the three states that are t...
Humanitarian action as a tool of political engagement in Afghanistan
Humanitarian Policy Group, ODI, 2001
Series of articles from the HPN Humanitarian Exchange focusing on experience of humanitarian intervention in Afghanistan Articles focus on The politicisation of humanitarian aid and its consequences for Afghans ...
How can crisis be avoided in Central Asia?
International Crisis Group, 2000
This article addresses the possibility that there will be civil unrest and large-scale violence in three Central Asian states: Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. The article points to several contemporary factors which indicate th...
Central Asian governments' repressive intolerance of religion is encouraging islamic militancy
International Crisis Group, 2001
This article deals with the issue of Islamic radical activity in Central Asian states of Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. The article stresses that although there is an increase in religious practices among the citizens of these...
Items 161 to 168 of 168

Items 161 to 2 of 2

Japan Afghan NGO Network (JANN)
Japanese NGOs in Afghanisatn
Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU)
Research organisation assisting humanitarian and development programmes in Afghanistan
Items 161 to 2 of 2

Conflict and security profiles on Afghanistan

Content from selected partners