From the editors

2014 is widely seen as marking a watershed for Afghanistan with its legacy of thirty-five years of conflict and one of the world’s largest populations in protracted displacement. International military forces are being withdrawn and the country is ‘in transition’ – politically, economically and in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Couldrey, M, Herson, M
Format: Journal article
Published: Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford 2014
Subjects:
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author Couldrey, M
Herson, M
author2 Couldrey, M
author_facet Couldrey, M
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Herson, M
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description 2014 is widely seen as marking a watershed for Afghanistan with its legacy of thirty-five years of conflict and one of the world’s largest populations in protracted displacement. International military forces are being withdrawn and the country is ‘in transition’ – politically, economically and in terms of security and its international standing. The high voter turnout in the recent presidential elections has been greeted as an encouraging sign for Afghanistan’s future but there is still considerable uncertainty about the capacity of the country to address the challenges of return, integration and reintegration, protection, access to rights, and continuing displacement.
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spelling oxford-uuid:010bfc0a-cc87-49fd-a1b2-18b33285e25b2022-03-26T08:32:46ZFrom the editorsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:010bfc0a-cc87-49fd-a1b2-18b33285e25bForced migrationORA DepositRefugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford2014Couldrey, MHerson, MCouldrey, MHerson, M2014 is widely seen as marking a watershed for Afghanistan with its legacy of thirty-five years of conflict and one of the world’s largest populations in protracted displacement. International military forces are being withdrawn and the country is ‘in transition’ – politically, economically and in terms of security and its international standing. The high voter turnout in the recent presidential elections has been greeted as an encouraging sign for Afghanistan’s future but there is still considerable uncertainty about the capacity of the country to address the challenges of return, integration and reintegration, protection, access to rights, and continuing displacement.
spellingShingle Forced migration
Couldrey, M
Herson, M
From the editors
title From the editors
title_full From the editors
title_fullStr From the editors
title_full_unstemmed From the editors
title_short From the editors
title_sort from the editors
topic Forced migration
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