Seizing the vote : women’s political participation in Afghanistan / Open Society Afghanistan.
Material type:
- Pamphlet HQ1236.5. A3.
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Available | 3ACKU000389212 | |||||
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Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Available | 3ACKU000389220 | |||||
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Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S45 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 3 | Available | 3ACKU000350941, 3ACK |
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Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S363 2002 Afghanistan’s reform agenda : | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S364 2015 Listening to women and girls displaced to urban Afghanistan / | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S434 2009 Structural barriers, cultural constraints, Meso traps & other challenges women’s empowerment in institutional mechanisms and power & decision-making : | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S45 2012 Seizing the vote : | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S46 2005 Seminar on the women’s political & social participation / | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S588 2014 A situation analysis 2014 : | Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.S635 2012 Social protection for informal workers : |
Cover title.
“June 2012”.
“Open Society Afghanistan = جامعه باز افغانستان”—cover page.
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents: Executive summary—1. Introduction—2. Context—3. Methodology—4. Findings—5. Conclusion and recommendations—References—List of tables.
Summary: “While Afghan women had gradually gained modest politi8cal rights during the 20th century, this trend was abruptly halted in the 1990s when the Mujahideen, and then later the Taliban, came to power. That decade saw a violent interruption in women’s political participation. Women’s right to vote, first granted in 1965, was restored when women and men both went to the polls in 2004 in the country’s first presidential elections of the post-Taliban governments. Since then, three more elections were…”—(page 7).
English