Afghanistan Essay

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    "Growing up in Afghanistan means growing up surrounded by violence, poverty and exclusion." Many people over there have never known peace. Many children have been separated from their parents, abandoned in orphanages or forced into labour. For numerous of children, being beaten and humiliated is something that happens to them daily. Teachers physically punishing children is legal, common and permitted. Girls being forced into early marriage and selling of daughters are two of their common practices

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    Modernization in Afghanistan and Iran

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    The process of Modernization in Afghanistan under King Amanullah Khan and Iran under Shah Reza Pahlavi The modernization process has been experienced in different ways by different countries that some of them succeeded and some of them failed. Theoretically it has been defined as “a concept in the sphere of social science that refers to the process in which society goes through industrialization, urbanization and other social changes” (Zapf, 2004).Even there is no single approach toward this process

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    Geographic Location: Afghanistan is bordered on the north by Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan. China lies on the Northeast, Iran by the west and Pakistan on the south and east. The country’s area is 653,000 sq. km. The Settled population in 2003-2004 according to CSO Estimated Population of Afghanistan Gazetteer amounted almost (20,691,400). The administrative division of Afghanistan according to Ministry of Interior consists of 34 Provinces and 397 Districts (National Atlas, 1986).

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    2002 the U.S. State Department reported that the Northern Alliance had done nothing to curb the production of opium. As a result, in 2002, Afghanistan’s opium production had returned to a similar level (3,400 tons) before the ban from the Taliban. Afghanistan quickly regained its monopoly on the world’s opium supply, roughly 90% of the world’s opium. Most American media outlets have blamed the Taliban for the resurgence in Afghan opium production. In fact, a few post 9/11 public service announcements

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    Fighting is constant in Afghanistan and it affects women significantly. The men in their lives control women, and because of the oppressive government, they hold no power in society. A Thousand Splendid Suns, written by Khaled Hosseini is a story of two young women, Laila and Mariam, who face and overcome many hardships and live in a country destroyed by political oppression and war. Hosseini exposes the inner strength of Afghan women through the point of view of these two women; a strength that

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    At the end of December 1979, the Soviet Union sent thousands of troops into Afghanistan and immediately assumed complete military and political control of Kabul and large portions of the country(U.S. Department of State). Afghanistan is overwhelmingly Muslim (99%). Islam is the second largest religion in Russia, with around fifteen to twenty million adherents in the country, or ten to fifteen percent of the population. But these demographic details have minimum bearing on the relations between the

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    Immediately after the overthrow of King Zahir Shah in 1973, Afghanistan began to experience a drastic increase of media restrictions under its next ruling powers. However, when the Taliban gained control in 1996, the Islamic State of Afghanistan began a period of regulation which can be considered the most restricted in the world. Censorship is the act of a government or powerful group filtering information, news, and media to fit approved topics and categories. Under censorship, the people now have

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    Afghanistan is a country that is mysterious to many outsiders. From the harsh landscape to the traditional social norms shared by its people, Afghanistan continues to mystify the world. The country’s unique location has influenced its history and people, and that of the nations and armies that have tried to conquer it. Like all nations, Afghanistan’s geography, infrastructure, history and people contribute to the overall culture of the country. The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan is located

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    below. Women Led organizations in Afghanistan AWC Afghan Women’s Council REFWID Feminist Majority Foundation of Refugee women in Development Inc CCA Cooperation Center for Afghans AWN Educators and Human Rights Commission in Pakistan, Afghan Women Network WAPHA Women’s Alliance for Peace and Human Rights in Afghanistan RAWA Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan Of those listed above Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), is more prominent. This

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    about Afghanistan to understand what some of the norms are for the people of Afghanistan. According to Charles R. Lister who wrote Cultural Awareness and Count Insurgency in Afghanistan, cultural awareness is defined as local-level understanding and appreciation of the foundational norms, values and expectations that govern and structure individual societies. Afghanistan’s culture, for example, is very different from the United States’. The religion, culture, and etiquette in Afghanistan differ

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