Social networks and migration in wartime Afghanistan / Kristian Berg Harpviken.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Basingstoke ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, ©2009.Description: xvi, 226 pages : maps ; 23 cmISBN:- 9780230576551
- HB2096.6. A3.
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monograph | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | HB2096.6.A3.H377 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3ACKU000397405 |
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HB1466.6.A3.A34 2011 Afghanistan mortality survey 2010 / | HB1951 26ص 1394 د نفوسو جغرافیه / | HB1952.P768 2008 Protecting internally displaced persons : | HB2096.6.A3.H377 2009 Social networks and migration in wartime Afghanistan / | HB3636.6.A3 ن 26 1383 مطالعه و تحقیق وضع دموگرافی افغانستان / | HB7122ع 1393 اساسات اقتصاد جزء (اقتصاد خُرد) / | HB7194ن 1395 اساسات اقتصاد کل (اقتصاد کلان) / |
Abstract: "Kristian Berg Harpviken presents a framework for understanding how people's networks are essential for their responses to war and disaster. People's network resources are crucial for mobilizing or maintaining physical resources, for their security, and for the gathering of information. Applying this framework to the analysis of wartime migration, the book challenges one-dimensional victim images of wartime migrants, emphasizing the importance of agency and network resources in responding to unpredictable social environments. The book's systematic application of a network analytical perspective, building on mechanisms developed through studies in other areas (particularly economic and organizational sociology) is unique. This analytical bridge-building brings new insights to the study of responses to armed conflict, where there has previously only been loose debate on whether social networks fragment or gain strength in the face of war. Discussing migration throughout three decades of war in Afghanistan, the book is based on original fieldwork during the period of the Taliban's domination of Afghanistan, focusing on two villages in one of the country's most severely war-stricken areas"—Book cover.
“Includes bibliography”—(pages 199-221).
Contents: Preface—Glossary—Acronyms—Maps of Afghanistan in the region and the main fieldwork Area—1. Introduction—2. Social networks in wartime migration—3. Escape decisions—4. Integration at exile—5. Return decisions—6. Reintegration at home—7. Conclusions—Appendix : researching migration in war—Note—Bibliography—Author index—Subject index.
English