Gendering Human Security in Afghanistan

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A01=Ben Walter
Afghan Turkestan
Afghan women's rights
Afghanistan
Author_Ben Walter
Bamyan Province
Bin Laden's Training Camps
Bin Laden’s Training Camps
Category=GTU
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Category=JPS
Category=JPVH
Category=JPWS
Category=JW
Category=NHWR9
Coin
Community Based Dispute Resolution
conflict transformation
Counter Insurgency
critical social theory
Durrani Pashtun
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Ethno Linguistic Groups
feminist security studies
gender
gendered impacts of Western intervention
Gendering Human Security
Gul Agha Sherzai
Hazara Communities
Hazara Families
Hazara Women
Human Security
international legacy
Major Ethno Linguistic Groupings
Masculine Honour Code
Nangarhar Province
NATO Mission
NSP.
Pashtun Nomads
Pashtun Tribes
post-conflict reconstruction
qualitative fieldwork
Shinwari Pashtuns
Western intervention
Western State Building
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138640641
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book employs the concept of human security to show what the term means from the perspective of women in Afghanistan.

It engages with a well-established debate in academic and policy-making contexts regarding the utility of human security as a framework for understanding and redressing conflict. The book argues that this concept allows the possibility of articulating the substantive experiences of violence and marginalisation experienced by people in local settings as well as their own struggles towards a secure and happy life. In this regard, it goes a long way to making sense of the complex dynamics of conflict which have confounded Western policy-makers in their ongoing state-building mission in Afghanistan. However, despite this inherent potential, the idea of human security still needs refinement. Crucially, it has benefitted from critical feminist and critical social theories which provide the conceptual and methodological depth necessary to apprehend what a progressive ethical program of security looks like and how it can be furthered. Using this framework, the work provides a critical reconstruction of the effect of the US-led Western Intervention on women’s experiences of (in)security in the three provincial contexts of Nangarhar, Bamiyan and Kabul. This reconstruction is drawn from a wealth of historical and contemporary sociological research alongside original fieldwork undertaken in Delhi, India, during 2011 with women and men from the country’s different communities.

This book will be of much interest to students of human security, state-building, gender politics, war and conflict studies and IR in general.

Ben Walter is Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland, Australia.

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