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America's Catch-22: The Iran Question in Afghanistan
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • America's Catch-22: The Iran Question in Afghanistan

    This Opinion first appeared in Frontline.com’s Tehran Bureau on June 13, 2012 and was co-authored by Christina Lin

    As U.S. and other NATO troops prepare to leave Afghanistan in 2014, a geopolitical realignment will be under way in Southwest Asia. One possible scenario would outright undermine a principle U.S. policy objective in the region: the containment of Iran.

    Trafficking in Antiquities during a Time of War
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Trafficking in Antiquities during a Time of War

    When Russian archaeologist Viktor Sarianidi excavated Tilya Tepe in 1978, 21,000 bejeweled, gold artifacts created during the Greco-Bactrian era known as The Golden Hoard of Bactria were reported as inventoried, photographed, and catalogued. But in consideration of the time (1978), and the fact that the Kremlin was considering military intervention in Afghanistan in support of the Communist regime, it seems prudent to challenge the veracity of Professor Sarianidi’s findings.

    June 5, 2012

    Delivering on the Commitments of Afghanistan Conferences
  • Analysis
  • Delivering on the Commitments of Afghanistan Conferences

    Last December in Bonn, Germany hosted and Afghanistan chaired an international conference on “Afghanistan and the International Community: From Transition to the Transformation Decade.” Eighty-five countries and 15 international organizations participated in the Conference to celebrate their shared 10-year achievements, and to recommit to consolidating and sustaining these achievements beyond 2014 into a decade of transformation until 2024.

    May 14, 2012

    Civil Society and Community Mobilization in Afghanistan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Civil Society and Community Mobilization in Afghanistan

    Originally posted December 2009

    Civil Society (CS) consists of various kinds of community-based, non-governmental movements that, without waiting for or requesting government orders or assistance, come together mainly to solve problems and effect change. CS actors in Afghanistan exist at the local, district, and national levels. They are engaged in resolving problems and in calling upon people to contribute to, or participate in, community-based activities.

    April 23, 2012

    Education beyond the School Room
  • Analysis
  • Education beyond the School Room

    Originally posted December 2009

    Experts throughout the massive aid community in Afghanistan agree that education is vital for development. Education shapes the quality of productivity, products, and services. Education informs citizens of the roles that they must play so that good governance may thrive. Education molds the quality of leadership. Yet, despite the rhetoric, the education sector is perennially underfunded; typically, it receives scarcely 10% of what is provided to other sectors.

    April 23, 2012

    The Emerging Afghan Media: Beyond the Stereotyping of Women?
  • Analysis
  • The Emerging Afghan Media: Beyond the Stereotyping of Women?

    Originally posted December 2009

    For the past 30 or more years, media content in Afghanistan mostly has been controlled by the central government and its supporters. During this period, as throughout the 20th century, the most important and widely available forms of media have been national radio and television. However, rural perspectives and the realities of rural life have been conspicuously absent from most media content. Moreover, because of traditionally rigid gender roles, Afghan women have had very limited or almost no access to media and information sources.

    April 23, 2012

    Women's Agency in Afghanistan: From Survivors to Agents of Change
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Women's Agency in Afghanistan: From Survivors to Agents of Change

    Originally posted December 2009

    Often, policy debates on the empowerment of women in Afghanistan are impaired by the historic backlashes against radical top-down reforms and women’s emancipation (e.g., unseating kings) or by the assumption that the male-dominated culture makes it nearly impossible to create space for the advancement of women’s rights. As a result, the effort to develop a cohesive strategy for enhancing women’s participation in the reconstruction agenda is hampered.

    April 23, 2012

    Local Perceptions of Rural Development Programs
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Local Perceptions of Rural Development Programs

    Originally posted December 2009

    The NGO people drive around in big white cars, live in our cities’ best houses and receive high salaries, though most of them would be jobless in their own country. They come here for two, three hours, and we tell them what they need to hear. They express empathy with our difficult situation, and then they get back into their air-conditioned four wheel drives and race off leaving us behind in a cloud of dust. Often they are never seen again.
    —Farmers in rural Kunduz Province, 2006

    April 20, 2012