A broken relationship : a study of the Provincial Councils and their ability to serve the Afghan people / researchers and report authors Nasrat Esmaty, Asadullah Ahamdi ; Research and field work Rohullah Obaidy, Jamila Poya, Fahima Naseri, Nasrat Esmaty and Asadullah Ahmadi ; Project Director and principal analyzer Jamila Omar ; Final review Revecca Wright.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: Publication details: Kabul : Human Rights Research and Advocacy Consortium (HRRAC), 2010.Description: vii, 52 p. ; 27 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • Pamphlet JS 7442.2 .E86 2010/ + /PDF/(1.24MB)
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Books Books Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University Pamphlet JS 7442.2 .E86 2010/ + /PDF/(1.24MB) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 21452
Books Books Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University Available 26007
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“July 2010”.

“Includes bibliography”—(p. 52).

“Human Rights Research and Advocacy consortium”—at head of title.

Summary: “Research carried out in 2008 and 2009 by HRRAC confirmed that ordinary people’s voices in Afghanistan are silenced by local powerbrokers, especially in rural areas, and that ties between citizens and their elected representatives at all levels remain weak,. In particular, a 2009 HRRAC survey of informal workers revealed widespread feelings of disappointment with how Members of Provincial Councils (MPCs) interacted with and served their constituents. Disenchantment depresses the political participation on which Afghanistan’s nascent democracy must ultimately stand. Following the election of new Provincial Councils (PCs) under less than ideal conditions at the end of 2009, the development of more and better linkages between constitutions and MPCs is urgently required”—(Executive summary, p. 1).

Contents: Acknowledgements—Organizational summary—Acronyms—Executive summary—Key findings—Recommendations—to the government of Afghanistan (GoA)—Methodology and respondent profiles—Chapter I : introduction (p. 6)—Chapter II : provincial governance in Afghanistan (p. 9)—Chapter III : general finding on constituents’ views of the provincial councils’ work (p. 14)—Chapter IV : obstacles to the successful functioning of the provincial councils-the provincial council law (p. 15)—Chapter V : obstacles to the successful functioning of the provincial councils-socio-ethnic dynamics in Afghanistan (p. 21)—Chapter VI : a glance at how the constituents view the performance of the provincial councils (p. 30)—Appendixes—Bibliography.