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Drawing on long experience of living and working in Afghanistan, Chris Johnson and Jolyon Leslie examine what the changes of recent years have meant in terms of Afghans' sense of their own identity and hopes for the future.
Widely portrayed as the "success of the war on terror," Afghanistan is now in crisis. Increasingly detached from the people it is meant to serve, and unable to manage the massive amounts of aid that it has sought, the administration in Kabul struggles to govern even the diminishing areas of the country over which it has some sway. Many Afghans feel themselves to be trapped, hostage between two forces, both claiming to be their liberators.
Contents
Illustrations
Introduction: four years on
1 The mirage of peace
2 Identity and society
3 Ideology and difference
4 One size fits all – Afghanistan in the new world order
5 The makings of a narco state?
6 State
7 Bonn and beyond, part I: the political transition
8 Bonn and beyond, part II: the governance transition
9 Concluding thoughts
An Afghan chronology
Further reading
References
zanotowane.pldoc.pisz.plpdf.pisz.plklimatyzatory.htw.pl