Afghanistan : monitoring women’s security in transition : baseline report / APPRO.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: [Place of publication not identified] : Afghan Women’s Network (AWN), 2013.Description: 66, 54 pages ; 28 cmSubject(s): LOC classification:
  • Pamphlet HQ1236.5. A3.
Summary: Summary: “Conflict and violence affect women and men differently, and although women are rarely direct participants in conflict, they often sufer the most. Afghanistan’s various conflicts over the last three decades prove this with the nation’s women-as well as children-enduring incredible hardship in conflicts they were rarely participants in. however, despite the suffering the Afghan women endured during the years of civil war and under the conservative Taliban regime, clear progress in terms of women’s rights has undeniably been made in Afghanistan in the past decade since the return of representative government in 2001…”—(page 5).
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Monograph Monograph Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University Pamphlet HQ1236.5.A3.A699 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available 3ACKU000392711
Monograph Monograph Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University Available 3ACKU000392737
Monograph Monograph Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University Available 3ACKU000392729
Total holds: 0

Cover title.
“June 2013”.
Texts are in Dari and English.
“Afghanistan Public Policy Research Organization (APPRO) = موسسه مطالعات عامه افغانستان = دعامه خیرنو موسسه”—cover page.
“افغانستان : نظارت امنیت زنان در پروسه انتقال گزارش ابتدایی”—Back cover.

“Includes bibliography”—(pages 65-66).

Summary: “Conflict and violence affect women and men differently, and although women are rarely direct participants in conflict, they often sufer the most. Afghanistan’s various conflicts over the last three decades prove this with the nation’s women-as well as children-enduring incredible hardship in conflicts they were rarely participants in. however, despite the suffering the Afghan women endured during the years of civil war and under the conservative Taliban regime, clear progress in terms of women’s rights has undeniably been made in Afghanistan in the past decade since the return of representative government in 2001…”—(page 5).

English