Humanitarian and Reconstruction Assistance to Afghanistan, 2001
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The Foreign Fighters Problem, Recent Trends and Case Studies: Selected Essays
Program on National Security at the FOREIGN POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE Al-Qaeda al-Shabaab AQIM AQAP Central The Foreign Fighters Problem, Recent Trends and Case Studies: Selected Essays Edited by Michael P. Noonan Managing Director, Program on National Security April 2011 Copyright Foreign Policy Research Institute (www.fpri.org). If you would like to be added to our mailing list, send an email to [email protected], including your name, address, and any affiliation. For further information or to inquire about membership in FPRI, please contact Alan Luxenberg, [email protected] or (215) 732-3774 x105. FPRI 1528 Walnut Street, Suite 610 • Philadelphia, PA 19102-3684 Tel. 215-732-3774 • Fax 215-732-4401 About FPRI Founded in 1955, the Foreign Policy Research Institute is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization devoted to bringing the insights of scholarship to bear on the development of policies that advance U.S. national interests. We add perspective to events by fitting them into the larger historical and cultural context of international politics. About FPRI’s Program on National Security The end of the Cold War ushered in neither a period of peace nor prolonged rest for the United States military and other elements of the national security community. The 1990s saw the U.S. engaged in Iraq, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, and numerous other locations. The first decade of the 21st century likewise has witnessed the reemergence of a state of war with the attacks on 9/11 and military responses (in both combat and non-combat roles) globally. While the United States remains engaged against foes such as al-Qa`ida and its affiliated movements, other threats, challengers, and opportunities remain on the horizon. -
Afghanistan Report/Duotone
oug thr h hu ice m st a u n j r l i a g i h CENTER FOR ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RIGHTS c t o s s Human Rights and Reconstruction in Afghanistan MAY, 2002 oug thr h hu ice m st a u n j r l i a g i h c t o s s Center for Economic and Social Rights 162 Montague Street, 2nd floor Brooklyn, NY 11201 Tel: 718-237-9145 • Fax: 718-237-9147 [email protected] www.cesr.org Credit: University of Texas, Perry-Casteñada Library A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS n the post-Cold War era, more people than ever live in abject I poverty, deprived of any meaningful opportunity to fulfill their human potential. Established in 1993, the Center for Economic and Social Rights is one of the first organizations to challenge economic injustice as a violation of international human rights law. In projects abroad and in the United States, CESR combines research, advocacy, collaboration, and education. The basic aim of our work is to mobilize people to confront the policies that keep them poor. While the challenges are immense, real change is possible when communities use human rights to hold decision-makers – be they governments or corporations – accountable for their actions. e are grateful to all the Afghans and inter- facilitating the mission in Peshawar and Jalalabad. We national aid workers who consented to be also thank the Board of Global Ministries, United W interviewed for this report. It is clear that Methodist Church, for additional financial support. the main reason for optimism about Afghanistan’s future lies in the courage and resilience of the Afghan people, The mission participants were Hadi Ghaemi, Roger and the dedication and commitment of aid workers. -
Safeguarding Women's Rights in Afghanistan
153 Oxfam Briefing Paper 3 October 2011 A place at the table Safeguarding women‟s rights in Afghanistan www.oxfam.org Participants from the Women for Women programme, Afghanistan. © Women for Women International. Women in Afghanistan have achieved real progress in areas such as political participation, the rule of law, and education since 2001, but these hard-won gains remain fragile. With the imminent withdrawal of international forces, there is a risk that the government may sacrifice women’s rights in order to secure a political deal with the Taliban and other armed opposition groups. The government and its international partners must do much more to support Afghan women’s efforts and uphold their rights while ensuring that women have a strong voice in any future negotiations and political settlements. Summary ‘Women want peace but not at the cost of losing our freedom again.’ Noorjahan Akbar, co-founder of Young Women for Change.1 Ten years on from the start of the Western intervention in Afghani- stan, Afghan women are facing an uncertain future. Women have strived for and made important gains since the fall of the Taliban in 2001, including in political participation and access to education, but these gains are fragile and reversible. The precarious situation for Afghan women is set against a backdrop of spreading insecurity across Afghanistan. Civilian casualties are in- creasing, with May 2011 the deadliest month of the war for civilians since 2007.2 As security deteriorates across the country, violence against women is also on the rise. Both the Afghan and US governments are attempting to engage in parallel talks with the Taliban to reach a political solution to the con- flict before international military forces withdraw by the end of 2014. -
Afghanistan 2015 Human Rights Report
AFGHANISTAN 2015 HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Afghanistan is an Islamic republic with a strong, directly elected presidency, a bicameral legislative branch, and a judicial branch. Presidential and provincial elections held in 2014 were marred by allegations of fraud that led to an audit of all ballot boxes. Protracted political negotiations between the presidential candidates led to the creation of a national unity government headed by President Ashraf Ghani, with runner-up Abdullah Abdullah assuming the newly created post of chief executive officer. Constitutionally mandated parliamentary elections did not take place during the year. The most recent parliamentary elections took place in 2010 and were marred by high levels of fraud and violence, according to domestic observers, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and other international election-monitoring organizations. Civilian authorities generally maintained control over the security forces, although there were occasions when security forces acted independently. The most significant human rights problems were widespread violence, including indiscriminate attacks on civilians by armed insurgent groups; armed insurgent groups’ killings of persons affiliated with the government; torture and abuse of detainees by government forces; widespread disregard for the rule of law and little accountability for those who committed human rights abuses; and targeted violence of and endemic societal discrimination against women and girls. Other human rights problems included -
Kandahar Survey Report
Agency for Rehabilitation & Energy-conservation in Afghanistan I AREA Kandahar Survey Report February 1996 AREA Office 17 - E Abdara Road UfTow Peshawar, Pakistan Agency for Rehabilitation & Energy-conservation in Afghanistan I AREA Kandahar Survey Report Prepared by Eng. Yama and Eng. S. Lutfullah Sayed ·• _ ....... "' Content - Introduction ................................. 1 General information on Kandahar: - Summery ........................... 2 - History ........................... 3 - Political situation ............... 5 - Economic .......................... 5 - Population ........................ 6 · - Shelter ..................................... 7 -Cost of labor and construction material ..... 13 -Construction of school buildings ............ 14 -Construction of clinic buildings ............ 20 - Miscellaneous: - SWABAC ............................ 2 4 -Cost of food stuff ................. 24 - House rent· ........................ 2 5 - Travel to Kanadahar ............... 25 Technical recommendation .~ ................. ; .. 26 Introduction: Agency for Rehabilitation & Energy-conservation in Afghanistan/ AREA intends to undertake some rehabilitation activities in the Kandahar province. In order to properly formulate the project proposals which AREA intends to submit to EC for funding consideration, a general survey of the province has been conducted at the end of Feb. 1996. In line with this objective, two senior staff members of AREA traveled to Kandahar and collect the required information on various aspects of the province. -
Conflict and Peacebuilding Observatory Nº 35 – November 2015
Conflict and Peacebuilding Observatory Nº 35 – November 2015 WORSENING AFGHANISTAN: As the conflict rages, the Taliban split and Islamic State acquires new prominence US military sources announced the dismantling of what was probably al-Qaeda’s largest training camp. Located in the district of Shorabak in Kandahar province, the camp covered 77.7 km2. Losses of territory to the Taliban in some districts have been offset by gains in others. In Helmand, an offensive lasting several months pitted Afghan forces against the Taliban for control of the districts of Marjah and Nad-e-Ali, where over 200 Taliban and 85 soldiers were killed, according to the provincial government. In Kunduz, Afghan forces recovered a base in the district of Dasht-e-Archi, but lost a district in the province of Badakhshan. Government forces confirmed that alongside the Taliban, over 1,300 foreign insurgents (Pakistanis, Tajiks, Uyghurs and others) participated in the battle of Kunduz. Furthermore, in Nangarhar, where there is a group loyal to Islamic State, over 30 insurgents were killed in drone strikes. The local provincial government has stated that around 200 university students there are linked to Islamist groups. In fact, Islamic State banners were waved during an anti-government demonstration. In Zabul, Islamic State executed seven members of the Hazara (Shia) ethnic group that it abducted in September. Among them were three women, the first to be victims of beheading. Their families carried their bodies to Kabul, where they were joined by thousands of people (20,000 according to some media outlets) in one of the largest protests ever seen in the capital. -
National Conference
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE POPULAR CULTURE ASSOCIATION AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATION In Memoriam We honor those members who passed away this last year: Mortimer W. Gamble V Mary Elizabeth “Mery-et” Lescher Martin J. Manning Douglas A. Noverr NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE POPULAR CULTURE ASSOCIATION AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATION APRIL 15–18, 2020 Philadelphia Marriott Downtown Philadelphia, PA Lynn Bartholome Executive Director Gloria Pizaña Executive Assistant Robin Hershkowitz Graduate Assistant Bowling Green State University Sandhiya John Editor, Wiley © 2020 Popular Culture Association Additional information about the PCA available at pcaaca.org. Table of Contents President’s Welcome ........................................................................................ 8 Registration and Check-In ............................................................................11 Exhibitors ..........................................................................................................12 Special Meetings and Events .........................................................................13 Area Chairs ......................................................................................................23 Leadership.........................................................................................................36 PCA Endowment ............................................................................................39 Bartholome Award Honoree: Gary Hoppenstand...................................42 Ray and Pat Browne Award -
Gennaio 2021 Numero Miscellaneo Issue 45
Numero 45 – Gennaio 2021 Numero miscellaneo Issue 45 – January 2021 Miscellaneous Issue ISSN: 1824-4483 DEP n. 45 Indice Ricerche Parte monografica La violenza domestica in Asia orientale e sud-orientale Sara D’Attoma, Introduzione p. I Sara D’Attoma, 百年好(不)合! Cento anni di (in)felicità coniugale! Aspetti normativi del divorzio per violenza domestica nella Repubblica popolare cinese p. 1 Hsiaowei Kuan, The Law on Domestic Violence and Its Practice in Taiwan, (Taiwan) p. 24 Sumiko Honda, Reiko Ogawa, Domestic Violence in Japan: An Invisible Problem in the “Safest Country in the World” p. 35 Elodie Voisin, “As husband I must be violent”. Continuum of violence in forced migration and militarized policies. Ethnography among Rohingya Refugees in Malaysia p. 60 Parte miscellanea Corina Costea, The Evolution of Romanian Law and Mechanism in the Fight against Trafficking in Human Beings. A Focus on the Situation of Women p. 80 Doreen Perl-Valentina Srbuljevic, The Importance of the Inclusion of Women’s Rights in the US – Taliban Peace Treaty p. 98 Documenti Claire Goll, La mano di cera (1917), traduzione di Serena Tiepolato p. 122 Kathleen Lonsdale, Security and Responsibility (1954), traduzione e cura di Maria Grazia Suriano p. 127 Recensioni, interventi, resoconti Annalisa Zabonati, “Bringing peace home”. I corpi delle donne e degli animali nonumani nell’analisi ecofemminista critica di Carol J. Adams p. 151 Arianna Ceschin, “La degradazione è la dea del momento”: natura e società nella scrittura di Anna Maria Ortese p. 158 Claire Tomalin, Jane Austen, la vita (Bianca Tarozzi) p. 169 Vandana Shiva, Reclaiming the Commons, Biodiversity, Indigenous Knowledge and the Rights of Mother Earth (Sara Dal Monico) p. -
Women and Conflict in Afghanistan
Women and Conflict in Afghanistan Asia Report N°252 | 14 October 2013 International Crisis Group Headquarters Avenue Louise 149 1050 Brussels, Belgium Tel: +32 2 502 90 38 Fax: +32 2 502 50 38 [email protected] Table of Contents Executive Summary ................................................................................................................... i Recommendations..................................................................................................................... iii I. Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 1 II. Decades of Civil War ........................................................................................................ 2 A. The Anti-Soviet Jihad ................................................................................................ 2 B. The Taliban’s Gender Apartheid ................................................................................ 4 III. Post-2001 Gains ............................................................................................................... 7 A. Constitutional Guarantees and Electoral Rights ....................................................... 7 B. Institutional Equality, Protection and Development ................................................ 9 IV. Two Steps Forward, One Step Back ................................................................................. 13 A. Political Empowerment and Electoral Gains............................................................ -
Bibliography of Sexuality Studies in Latin America
Bibliography of Sexuality Studies in Latin America In 1997 Donna J. Guy and I published a bibliography of sexuality studies on Latin America in our edited book Sex and Sexuality in Latin America (New York University Press, 1997), including studies in a wide variety of fields. This bibliography was updated for the Spanish edition of that book, Sexo y sexualidades en América Latina (Paidos, Buenos Aires, 1998); that version included a number of items that had come to our attention after we turned in the book to NYU. Interestingly, the number of publications in Latin America (and in Spanish and Portuguese) increased in that brief period, and continues to increase. Adán Griego has added his own bibliography and has agreed to maintain it and keep it current. The bibliography that follows is based on the previous ones but has the advantage of not being fixed in time. —— Daniel Balderston, 1999. This bibliographic list is organized alphabetically by author, or by title in a few cases where no specific author appears. Select the initial letter of the author or the title of the work you are looking for or simply scroll down the list. Please send corrections, additions and comments to: [email protected] A A las orillas de Lesbos. Narrativa lésbica. Lima: MHOL, 1997. Abad, Erika Gisela. "¿La Voz de Quién?" Diálogo, No.12, (Summer 2009): 28. Abdalla, Fernanda Tavares de Mello and Nichiata, Lúcia Yasuko Izumi. A Abertura da privacidade e o sigilo das informações sobre o HIV/Aids das mulheres atendidas pelo Programa Saúde da Família no município de São Paulo, Brasil. -
International Women of Courage Award Ceremony Recipients
INTERNAT I ONAL WOMEN ’S DAY International Women of Courage Award Ceremony MARCH 10, 2008 International Women of Courage Award Ceremony HOSTE D BY Under Secretary for Democracy and Global Affairs Paula J. Dobriansky FEATUR I NG The Honorable Condoleezza Rice Secretary of State MON D AY , MARC H 10, 2008 AN IN I T I AT I VE O F T H E Offi CE O F T H E SEN I OR COOR di NATOR F OR INTERNAT I ONAL WOMEN ’S ISSUES INTERNAT I ONAL WOMEN O F COURAGE In celebration of International Women’s Day, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will present the second annual Award for International Women of Courage to eight women from around the world. This award pays tribute to emerging women leaders and recognizes the courage and leadership shown by each as they struggle for social justice and women’s rights. This is the only award within the Department of State that pays tribute to emerging women leaders worldwide. Today, the Secretary of State will pay tribute to this year’s honorees from Somalia, Paraguay, Pakistan, Kosovo, Fiji, Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Palestinian Authority. They are among over 95 exceptional women nominated by U.S. Embassies worldwide for their extraordinary work in advancing women’s rights. 1 Suraya Pakzad Afghanistan Suraya Pakzad is the founder of Voice of Women, one of a minority of organizations dedicated to helping women in Afghanistan. Voice of Women is based in Herat but has offices in three provinces across the region. Founded in 1998, her organization continued to operate during the Taliban rule, mainly in Kabul, and continues to face tremendous challenges even today. -
Die Jagd Nach Dem Scheich in Den Kiefernwäldern Der Provinz Kunar Vermuten Geheimdienste Aus Aller Welt Osama Bin Laden
Ausland AFGHANISTAN Die Jagd nach dem Scheich In den Kiefernwäldern der Provinz Kunar vermuten Geheimdienste aus aller Welt Osama Bin Laden. Kaum befahrbare Straßen und die Nähe zu Pakistan machen die Gegend zu einem perfekten Versteck. Der Mann, der im Auftrag Kabuls nach dem Terrorchef fahndet, ist selbst ein Gejagter. Kunar war nicht schlecht. Dem eigentlichen Objekt seiner Neugier wäre er dort um einiges näher gewesen. Nordöstlich der Provinzhauptstadt Jala- labad, im gebirgigen Grenzgebiet der afgha- nischen Provinzen Nangarhar und Kunar, sitzt ein großer korpulenter Mann auf einem Plastikstuhl und wischt sich den Schweiß von der Stirn. Es ist zwölf Uhr mittags, ein Dutzend Pick-ups und Toyota-Geländewagen par- ken in der Nähe eines Gasthauses am Rand der Straße – wenn diese staubige Geröll- piste, die in die Berge führt, überhaupt den Namen verdient. „Scheißhitze!“, flucht der dicke Mann, „außerdem habe ich Hunger.“ Sofort flitzt einer seiner Begleiter los und kommt wenige Minuten später mit ei- SIPA PRESS SIPA ner Aluminiumschüssel voller Rosinenreis Bin Laden*, Fahnder Zaman n den Hotels von Kabul treffen sich Seelenruhig und allem Agenten aller Herren Länder. Jede Irdischen entrückt INation scheint ihre eigenen Geheim- dienstler an den Hindukusch entsandt zu die gleichfalls ihre Be- haben. Konkurrenz belebt das Geschäft. richte absetzen. So lässt Südafrikaner fragen aus, wer immer ihnen es sich aushalten in Ka- über den Weg läuft. Australier ohne er- bul: Es gibt europäisches kennbare Profession recherchieren fleißig, Bier, es gibt Pizza und und es bleibt unklar, für wen. Satellitenfernsehen – und MÜLLER KNUT Auch der türkische Geheimdienst Milli eine ungelöste Frage, an Istihbarat Teskilati hat seinen Mann an die der, von den Amerikanern ausgelobt, 25 und Lammfleisch zurück.