Afghanistan in 2019 : a survey of the Afghan people / authors Tabasum Akseer, Khadija Hayat, Emily Catherine Keats, Sayed Rohullah Kazimi, Charlotte Maxwell-Jones, Mohammed Sharih Shiwan, David Swift, Mustafa Yadgari, Fahim Ahmad Yousufzai ; editors Tabasum Akseer and Johan Rieger ; design Kristin Kelly Colombano, Sayed Rashid Sadat.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: [Kabul, Afghanistan] : The Asia Foundation, ©2019.Description: 339 pages : color illustrations, color maps, color charts ; 23 cmSubject(s):- Public opinion – Afghanistan
- Postwar reconstruction – Afghanistan
- Democratization – Afghanistan
- Nation-building – Afghanistan
- Rural development – Afghanistan
- Economic assistance, American – Afghanistan
- Economic development – Afghanistan
- Humanitarian assistance – Afghanistan
- Afghanistan – Politics and government – 2001-
- DS371.4. A544 2019
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monograph | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | DS371.4.A544 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 3ACKU000544196 | |||
Monograph | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | Available | 3ACKU000544188 |
“The Asia Foundation”—cover page.
Contents: Executive summary—1. National mood—2. Security—3. Economic growth and employment—4. Development and service deleivery—5. Governance—6. Political participation—7. Access to information and the media—8. Women in society—9. Migration—Appendixes.
Summary: “Afghanistan in 2019: a survey of the Afghan people is the Asia Foundation’s fifteenth annual public opinion survey in Afghanistan. The longest-running barometer of public opinion in Afghanistan, the survey has gathered the views of more than 129,800 Afghans since 2004, and provides a longitudinal portrait of evolving public perceptions of national mood ; security; the economy; service delivery; governance; political participation, including elections and peace and reconciliation with the Taliban; access to media; the role of women; and migration…”—(page 15).
English