Between hope and fear : intimidation and attacks against women in public life in Afghanistan / Human Rights Watch (HRW).
Material type:
- Women – Afghanistan – Political activity
- Leadership in women – Afghanistan
- Women – Afghanistan
- Women’s rights – Afghanistan
- Women – Afghanistan – Social conditions
- Women – Education – Afghanistan
- Women in public life – Afghanistan
- Women in politics –Afghanistan
- Women – Crimes against – Afghanistan
- Human rights – Violation – Afghanistan
- Pamphlet HQ 1735.6 .B48 2004
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Pamphlet HQ 1735.6 .B48 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 12347 | |||
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Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Available | 21873 | ||||
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Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Available | 21874 |
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Pamphlet DS 371.4 .A49 .E68 /2012/ + /PDF/(5.85) Path dependency & the international conference on Afghanistan : from Bonn 2001 to Bonn 2011 / Author Ahmad Javeed Ahwar ; edit & layout Tareq Eqtedary. | Pamphlet HQ 1236.5 .A3 .M35 /2002 Beneath the burqa / photographed by Alex Majoli. | Pamphlet HQ 1735.6 .B48 2004 Between hope and fear : intimidation and attacks against women in public life in Afghanistan / Human Rights Watch (HRW). | Between hope and fear : intimidation and attacks against women in public life in Afghanistan / Human Rights Watch (HRW). | Between hope and fear : intimidation and attacks against women in public life in Afghanistan / Human Rights Watch (HRW). | B 13.5 CLO -4312 A Pathan company / H.M. Close | Pamphlet HQ 1735.6 .D87 1981 Revolutionary rhetoric and Afghan women / Nancy Hatch Dupree. |
Cover title.
“October 2004”.
“Human Rights Watch”—at head of title.
Includes bibliographical references.
Summary: “When a U.S.-led coalition invaded Afghanistan in October 2001, one of the justifications for the war was that it would liberate women form the misogynistic rule of the Taliban. Three years later, on the eve of the country’s first-ever national presidential elections on October 9, 2004, there have been notable improvements for women and girls. More than one million girls are enrolled in school, the new constitution contains guarantees for women’s equal rights, and according to official figures, approximately 40 percent of all registered voters are women…”—(p. 1).
English