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Gender Inequality in Afghanistan


Afghanistan has a very rugged geography and is populated by a variety of ethnic , religious and tribal groups- all of which have unique cultural norms and traditions. Much of the country lacks fixed residences, making exact demographic statistics difficult to obtain, but in 2014 the population is estimated at 31.8 million[1] , with a 2.3-6 percent annual growth rate[2] [1]; females account for less than half of the total population (~49 percent),[1] a 2 percent gender disparity. The population gender gap varies throughout the life cycle[1] ; mortality inequality is function of a gender bias that results in unequal access to basic nutrition, healthcare, and other women's issues that impact survival[3] and life capability[4] [5]- to live a long, healthy, and secure life. 75 percent of the population is rural- less than 10 percent reside in the six most populated cities.[2] The ethnic dynamics, traditional patriarchal culture, Islamic framework for societal values and informal justice systems, and resultant strict gender roles create a myriad of deficits and capability deprivations for women.[5][6] [4] and gender disparities in most facets of life for women in Afghanistan.


Global Rankings and Demographic Statistics

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  • 2012 Gender inequality Index[7]
    • Rank: 147/148
    • Value: 0.712
  • 2012 Seats in National Parliament: 27.6 percent held by females
    • 27 percent of seats are constitutionally appropriated to be held by female representatives[8]
  • 2011 Labor Force Participation Rate
    • Female: 15.7 percent
    • Male: 80.3 percent
  • 2010 Maternal Mortality Ratio: 460/ 100,000 live births
  • Adolescent Fertility Rate: 99.6 births/ 1,000 women age 15-19
  • Life expectancy is 44 (one of the lowest of any country)[9]
  • 2010 Population with at least a secondary education
    • Female: 5.8 percent [10]
    • Male: 34 percent [10]
  • 2010 Average years of schooling for females: 1.840[11]
  • Nine out of ten Afghan women are illiterate.[9]

Afghan Population Distribution by Gender, Age

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Age Population Distribution Males % of Demographic (m) Females % of Demographic (f) Total
0-14 years 42% 6,793,832 50.8% 6,579,388 49.2% 13,373,220
15-24 years 22.2% 3,600,264 51.0% 3,464,781 49.0% 7,065,045
25-54 years 29.4% 4,771,323 51.0% 4,586,963 49.0% 9,358,286
55-64 years 2.5% 603,197 49.2% 622,539 50.8% 1,225,736
65+ years 2.5% 371,753 46.4% 428,808 53.6% 800,561
Total Population 100% 16,140,369 50.7% 15,682,479 49.3% 31,822,848

Compiled by Lorin Sage MacQueen, 2014. Data Sourced from CIA Library: "The World Factbook"[1]

See also: ''United Nations Development Programme''; Data sourced from UNDP Human Development Reports: Table 4, 7.[7] [12] [13] [14]
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  • Modern Afghan monarchies took some measures to change laws that were especially detrimental to the value and welfare of women in the early 20th century. Emir Abdur Rahman Khan formally abolished a custom forcing a women to marry the next of kin of her deceased husband, raised the age of marriage and gave women rights to a divorce under some specific circumstances, as well as some rights to property held by their husbands and fathers. Much of the progress during this era has been attributed by experts [15][16] to the emir's wife, Bobo Jan. She was the country's first queen to appear in public without the traditional veil and had political and military interests. While Abdur Rahman Khan viewed women as subservient to men, he held the position that they deserved "just treatment".[17]
  • His son, Habibullah Khan, ruled from 1901 until his assassination in 1919. Habibullah continued the progressive policies; his wives were commonly seen unveiled in public and he established a ceiling on the extravagant weddings that were a common source of poverty for families.[17]
  • When Habibullah was assassinated, his son Amanullah took power after staging a coup that ousted Habibullah's brother, Nasrullah, ending his week-long reign. This signified the modernization of Afghanistan. Amir Amanullah’s agenda for modernization included freeing women from traditional tribal cultural rules, his enthusiasm and persistence stemming from international modernization efforts and observations. Among his efforts were public campaigns against the veil and polygamy; he also publicly encouraged the education of girls in all regions of the country- not only in urban Kabul but also in the rural countryside and tribal regions.
  • Mahmud Tarzi was an influential force of encouragement for Amanullah’s efforts. Tarzi valued monogamy, female education and employment- his female family members and their unveiled public appearances set an example for implementing changes. His daughter, Soraya, married Amanullah- another daughter married his brother. According to Dr. Huma Ahmed Ghosh, “Thus, it is not surprising that Tarzi’s sophisticated and liberal intellectual ideology blossomed and concretely embedded itself in Amanullahs reign.” [17]
  • Amanullah's efforts to bring Islamic and modernized state policies were too rapid and radical for conservative citizens in rural regions. By 1928,[17] tribal leaders had grown restless and joined together to protest the new freedoms exercise by women in Kabul- modernization hadn't reached rural areas beyond. The opposition of the Loya Jirga forced the Amir to rescind some policies and conform to a more traditional agenda. Schools were shut down and women had to revert to wearing the veil.[17]
  • In 1929, Amanullah was ousted, Mohammed Nadir Shah took power for four years until being assassinated, when Mohammed Zahir Shah took power and held it for the next four decades. Women's issues came back under consideration mid-century, when modernizing efforts emphasized a need for economically active women. By mid-century veiling had been declared optional. The third Constitution gave women the right to participate in elected politics and the first woman Minister was elected to Parliament in 1964. The next year the Democratic Organization of Afghan Women (DOAW) and the Soviet-backed People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) were established, the former aimed to combat illiteracy, ban forced marriages, and "do away with bride price."[17] [18]
  • The 1970's were time of intensive social reform- overseen by the PDPA.[18] Widespread literacy programs were introduced and women saw more representation in Parliament and education. A decree in 1978 was intended to ensure equal rights for women, but the rapid pace of social change was too much for the mullahs and tradition-oriented tribal leaders and met with a violent response. Women in western clothes were shot, female social workers faced unbearable harassment, and PDPA reformers were killed in rural regions. "“The PDPA'’s use of force in bringing the changes to fruition, combined with a brutal disregard for societal and religious sensitivities, resulted in massive backlash from the rural population"[19] according to Peter Marsden in The Taliban: War and Religion in Afghanistan.
  • From 1979 to 1989, when the Soviets left Afghanistan, the country was embroiled in a decade long war fueled by foreign political interests and aid. Rural unrest and traditional opposition gave the Mujahideen the support to incite a revolutionary army with the direct emphasis on reversing the gains in women's empowerment and restoring traditional Islamic rule.[17][18] When they took over Kabul in 1992 and declared the country an Islamic state, women were increasingly prohibited from the public sphere. In conservative areas, they were only allowed in public if covered head to toe with only a slit for the eyes. Dr. Ahmed-Ghosh noted this time was only the beginning of the apartheid against women in Afghanistan.[17] The Mujahideen burned universities and libraries, and the period was rife with new levels of brutal and sexual violence against women- so much so that young women viewed suicide as a preferable option to the rapes, amputations, forced marriages, and other barbaric forms of violence and disfigurement through 1996, according to Ahmed-Ghosh.[17] That year, the same foreign influences shifted support to the Taliban to counter the mujahideen. At this point, women were confined to their homes with little exception and not without a ''mahram'' (male relative acting as escort). Wearing the ''burqa'' was mandated and fancy shoes or make-up forbidden.
  • When the Taliban were in power, women were confined to the home, banned from radio, and television was nonexistent.[20]
  • When power shifted again in 2001, little relief became the oppressed women of Afghanistan. Through NGO and foreign aid involvement, some rights have been secured in the last decade, but underlying de-valuation of women that leads to the gender disparities in rights and freedoms remains. Even during the eras of progressive action for social reform, impacts were primarily confined to the Kabul region- the rural majority was largely unaffected. [17] Another issue facing women's empowerment in Afghanistan has been the entitlement and well-intentioned but ignorant fascination with traditional artifacts stereotypically associated with the oppression of women like the burqa- overshadowing the issues that are most important to Afghan women and feminists like education and health.[21]

Role of Tradition

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The female societal position is integral to many of the Afghan societal values; they are the standard for morality and passing on those values in a stringently patriarchal society.[22] Social status is determined largely by honor, and family is the single most important institution to honor. Most of the population lives in the rural countryside or tribal regions and live a culturally traditional life, which means that most of the women in Afghanistan are culturally subordinate to men and the fundamental value disparity allows women to be perpetually oppressed and, in some circumstances, violently deprived of rights and capabilities.

While tradition demands "respecting" women,[22] their empirically devalued position and expectation to bring honor to their family contribute to strict gender roles that constrain the lives of many Afghan women.[8] Traditional norms that permeate Afghanistan dictate women's sole existence in the domestic sphere, but Dr. Ahmed-Ghosh asserts that empowerment and the improved status of women does not necessitate the dismantling of the traditional family unit and kinship networks. [17]

Islamic Law

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The Quran has many conflicting and specific scriptures regarding women and their role in an Islamic society. Fundamentally, women are subordinated and exist a class below men, as explicitly stated is sura 2, ayah 228.[23][24] Interpretations of the Quran and sharia law constrain the lives of women to domestic and reproductive responsibilities, of which they are required to submit to the will of their husband. Obedience and subservience are required; sharia law gives women little control over their lives and bodies.[25] Sura 4 explicitly states that men are to control women: because they are inherently better than women, and because they are responsible to use their resources to support them.[26] In the same verse, ayah 34,[27] the righteous women is defined by obedience to her husband and male authority figures.
  • Virginity and "purity" are highly valued,[28] so much so that its absence devalues and dishonors women subject to patriarchal rule.
  • Along the same lines, menstruation is vilified[29] and men are implored to keep themselves away.[30] This deeply embedded ignorance negatively impacts women and their health by equation of healthy bodily processes unique to women, to a disgusting affliction.
  • Women are construed as resources to use and abuse at will- men are implored to do what they please to their wives,[31] as they belong to their husbands and must honor and submit to him.
  • Many verses surround the issue of the reproductive and intimate responsibilities,[32] extreme interpretations allow for marital rape, but nearly any adherence abolishes any control or power women have over their body or sexual and reproductive capabilities.
  • At the same time, any "lewdness" displayed by a women, to be interpreted at will, should result in the confinement until death or other fate ordained by Allah (to be carried out by the wronged or representative jirga).[33]
  • Sura 4, ayah 34 also blatantly encourages the use of domestic violence to encourage obedience from women.[30]
  • While the Quran also contains equitable verses concerning women, they are largely ignored in application.[30]
Acharya S of Freethought Nation summarizes the quranic position on women:
"Menstruating women are unclean, and men must stay away from them. Women are men’s “fields,” and men can have sex with them whenever they want. Men are superior to women and have authority over them, while women must obey men or risk being beaten. A woman is worth one-half of a man, and men are above women. Muslim men may marry up to four wives, including prepubescent girls, and can own sex slaves. Muslims are not allowed to marry non-Muslims, unless the latter convert to Islam. Women must cover themselves and be seen only by relatives, eunuchs, slaves and children who have not yet had sex with women."[30]
Sura 2 and 3 contain the verses (ayahs) that are interpreted to explicate sharia law regarding women; which, while broadly and variously interpreted, concentrates on the quranic declarations of subordinance and prescriptions for obedience of women, largely disregarding the admonitions for equality that exist within the religious text.[34]
The overwhelming sentiment that resonates through the Quran and is reflected in sharia law is the inarguable second class distinction of women and the overwhelming emphasis on the feminine responsibility to maintain her morality, purity, and obedience without exception. Women are prescribed to exist solely in the domestic sphere, submit to their husbands' every will and whim, and maintain themselves to please and honor their husbands and families.[30]
See also: Women in Islam
See also: Muslim Female Political Leaders: Islamic Texts

Tribal Laws

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The lives of women have been drastically and negatively affected by tribal power plays and conflicts over ethnic dominance, routinely used as capital and disposable resources.[17] [35] Gender roles have been shaped by tribal laws and sanctions, sometimes disregarding Sharia and constitutional laws.[8] Especially for women in rural regions of the country, lives and decisions are dictated by patriarchal tribal regimes and "kinship arrangements" which allow men to exercise untempered power over women.[17][35]

Formal Justice

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The formal justice system in Afghanistan has been historically underdeveloped and the rights it guarantees have failed to benefit women in the rural areas the national government has failed to reach- the influence of both has been largely confined to urban Kabul and surrounding area. Years of political instability, civil unrest, and foreign occupation have left the institution unstable and underdeveloped. Women within the legal system are rare, found only in the very urban areas within the system's reach.[8]

With the end of the most recent Taliban regime came a new constitution that secured equal rights under the law for men and women. The reach of the formal system is expanding, and there have been significant gains in female political representation- by 2005, women had been elected to more seats in the lower house than the constitutionally allocated 27 percent.[8] While the impact is still limited to places under the influence of the national government, excluding many rural regions, these recent developments have empowered Afghan women.

Informal Justice

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In countries like Afghanistan, fractured by stronger ethnic and tribal loyalties than national, informal, traditional justice systems are more valued by the populace than their formal counterparts due to their roots in community values.[8] The jirgas are given unspoken authority as they relieve a fiscal burden from the national government and have long-standing reverence.[8] [35] However, one crucial factor prevents the assemblies from truly arbitrating justice- the fundamental exclusion of women from participation.[8] When women are left without a voice in the primary forum for justice and community participation, they are left without means to protect themselves from the culturally prevalent patriarchal suppression and subjection. The all-male assemblies are naturally inclined to favor and conform to traditional gender disparities.[8]

The tribal dynamics and patriarchal culture are underlined by the intense devotion to Islam nation-wide. The constitution dictates that no laws in Afghanistan can contradict sharia, or Islamic law. The framework it creates is responsible for the resistance to change- away from the traditional and informal justice systems that are disengaged from the empowerment of women as a generality. Because their influence is not formally granted, but accepted on the whole as divine prescription, changes within the jirgas or shifts away from their patriarchal tendencies will have to be rooted in the participants. Until that shift in consciousness occurs on a national scale, women will remain deprived of the protections and freedoms secured by the newest constitution.


Seven Types of Inequality

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Amartya Sen identifies seven specific areas illustrative of gender inequality in "Many Faces of Gender Inequality." He acknowledges that "[g]ender inequality exists in most parts of the world...not one homogeneous phenomenon, but a collection of disparate and interlinked problems."[3] Those disparities and problems afflict women in Afghanistan more severely than nearly any other region, as indicated by a 147th place ranking in the 2012 Gender Inequality Index (out of 148 ranked).[7]

Mortality

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All other factors constant, women should experience a lower mortality rate than men in the same age demographic.[3]In countries without gender bias in healthcare, females consistently outnumber males in the population. Additionally, female fetuses are empirically less likely to miscarriage than their male counterparts.[3] According to the United Nations Development Programme's most recent statistics, the female mortality rate in 2010 was 352,[13] implying that more than 35 percent of 15 year-old females will die before age 60.[14] While there is no notable gender disparity in mortality rates, which may be partly attributable to the dangers many men face from occupational hazards, women face threats of sexual violence, disfigurement, execution, and a myriad of other brutalities that Afghan men simply do not by nature.[36] [17] Mortality rate, specifically for males, increase over the life cycle, the gender disparity is nearly non-existent in older generations.[1]

Maternal Mortality

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Devaluation of women in a fundamentally patriarchal culture subordinates them to Afghan males, deprioritizing their needs, especially in regard to health and medical care. There is little to no pre- or post-natal care for a large majority of Afghan women due to lack of access or financial ability.[37] As a result, giving birth is one of the most dangerous events in the life of an Afghan woman. More women die during pregnancy and childbirth in Afghanistan than almost anywhere else in the world[9]- 1 in 50, or a pregnancy-related death every 2 hours.[9] [38] Through the efforts of NGO's and foreign aid alliances, progress has been made but rates remain high.[38]

Infant & Childhood Mortality

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The health and welfare of children is undeniably contingent on that of women, and with the inarguable deficiencies in the treatment and valuation of women, children suffer. Malnutrition and other childhood health issues are directly attributable to the inadequate access to health care and resources for Afghan women. The high infant mortality rate (over ten percent)[13] and childhood death rates (nearly fifteen percent of children die before age five)[13] [14] are unfortunate but very real consequences of the gender disparities and subjection of women in the traditional society.[38]

Natality

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New age sexism, using technology for sex-selective abortions, is an unfortunate application of medical technology that results in natal inequality.[3] Somewhat fortunately, this phenomenon is limited to regions with common access to medical technology, something that Afghanistan is not. Due to the limited access and resources for healthcare, high-tech sexism[3] and the consequential natal gender inequality, is not one of the many, major barriers to women's empowerment and gender equality.
While the region lacks the necessary medical resources to propagate high-tech sexism, female children face immediate disadvantage- empirical data shows that girls receive medical attention secondary to boys, and are generally in much more severe circumstances when they do receive care. Resources are limited for most families, and investment in boys is seen as reaping a greater reward. At birth, females are not deprived relative to males,[3] but societally institutionalized gender biases result in capability deprivations that Afghan girls experience through the rest of their lives and perpetuate the cycle of poverty- among women and Afghan families in general.[37]

Basic Facility

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On the issue of basic facility inequality, Sen says, "Afghanistan may be the only country in the world the government of which is keen on actively excluding girls from schooling..." [3] Even today, less than 40 percent of Afghan girls attend elementary school, and only 5 percent attend beyond sixth grade.[9] Additional deficiencies in basic facility equality vary in forms of participation and developmental encouragement. The average Afghan woman has 1.840 years of schooling- 79.41 percent over age 15 have none at all.[10] According to UNDP data reports, only 5.8 percent of women have at least a secondary education,[7] as opposed to 34 percent of the male population, a sizable disparity.
Access to education is still limited in many areas, and families tend to value educating their sons over their daughters when they cannot afford to provide access for both.[37] Furthermore, many girls who are enrolled in school drop out or are forced to abandon their education by the inequity in household division of labor and the demands of those domestic responsibilities, lack of sanitary institutions, child marriage, and sexual harassment- even violence, to name a few causes.[37]

Special Opportunity

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Trends seem to be shifting; 11.25 percent of women age 15-19 have completed secondary education, more than twice the average female rate of secondary education completion (5.55 percent).[10] There is still significant room for improvement- less than two percent of Afghan women have attained tertiary education.[10] Males are still seen as a more worthy investment, as a result of long-standing gender roles that undervalue women outside of the household. While modern Afghan women are not barred from public appearance as they have been in the past[17] opportunities beyond the domestic sphere remain limited.

Professional

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It has been shown that when given the opportunity for economic engagement, paid labor force participation, women are still formally or informally excluded from the most financially lucrative positions, weakly represented in the most influential spheres.[37] While new jobs have become available in recent years, e.g. the increased demand for female Afghan police officers,[35] a significant wage disparity exists and opportunities remain limited and inequitable- hindering the expansion of economic empowerment for women.
Economic empowerment, through gainful employment opportunity, expands the female sphere of influence beyond domestic, household and reproductive constraints. It has also been shown that women with access those opportunities are more likely to be willing and able to secure them for their own children, as well as provide nutrition and health care and increase their family unit's standard of living.[37] Gainful employment and professional opportunities that empower women have a direct and substantial impact on the health and access to resources and opportunities of children, girls in particular.

Ownership

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Household

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The patriarchal culture and traditional, Islamic values present throughout Afghan society results in a fundamental gender bias that fosters inequality,

Inequality Across the Life Cycle

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[37]

Special Topics

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Women's rights activist studies report as many as 80 percent of marriages in poor, rural regions are forced or arranged without the consent or input of the bride. A significant majority of marriages are arrangements made by an older man and a young bride's father.
  • Over 50 percent of girls in Afghanistan are married or engaged to be by age 10, nearly 60 percent are married by 16.[9]
Poverty is a significant threat to the lives of most Afghan citizens, and it is far from uncommon for daughters to be traded as brides: to settle debts or bring resolution to some dispute, or sold into marriage for a sizable bride-price or to avoid the costs of support and care for the daughter.[35] [9] [37]
Impacts on child brides and children birthed to young mothers are incalculable and severely oppressive. Child brides end their education at the time of their marriage and thus, remain illiterate and unable to advocate for better circumstances for themselves and their children (specifically, daughters).[37] [3] Sharia law and traditional culture demand child-bearing, and girls who give birth before age 14 are 5 times more likely to die as a result of pregnancy than adult women.[9]
Furthermore, young brides are treated with little respect and hold low status in the family- opening them up to a higher likelihood of abuse as the hand of their husbands and in-laws.[9]

Consequences of the Opium Trade for Women

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Opium Brides

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Foreign and Domestic Conflict

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Effects of Inequality on Children & Family

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "The World Factbook". People and Society :: Afghanistan. CIA Library. Retrieved 22 Apr 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Country Profile: Afghanistan, August 2008" (PDF). Library of Congress - Federal Research Division. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Sen, Amartya (9 Nov 2001). ""Many Faces of Gender Inequality". Frontline.
  4. ^ a b Nussbaum, Martha (2000). Women and Human Development: The Capabilities Approach. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521003858.
  5. ^ a b Nussbaum, Martha (2004). "Promoting Women's Capabilities": 241–55. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Nussbaum, Martha C. (1995). Women, Culture, and Development: A Study of Human Capabilities. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  7. ^ a b c d "Human Development Reports: Data". Table 4. United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 11 Apr 2014.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Manganaro, Lynne L.; Poland, Amy L. (23 Jan 2012). "For Better or Worse? Gender and Perceptions of Formal and Informal Justice Systems in Afghanistan". Women & Criminal Justice. 22 (1): 2–29. doi:10.1080/08974454.2012.636287. Retrieved 24 April 2014.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Life as an Afghan Women". Trust in Education. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  10. ^ a b c d e Barro, Robert J. (Sept 2013). "A New Data Set of Educational Attainment in the World, 1950–2010". Journal of Development Economics. 104: 184–98. doi:10.1016/j.jdeveco.2012.10.001. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ "Afghanistan: Education Attainment". Barro-Lee Datasets. Retrieved 11 Apr 2014.
  12. ^ "Human Development Reports: Data". Attachment to Table 4. United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 12 Apr 2014.
  13. ^ a b c d "Human Development Reports: Data". Table 7. United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 11 Apr 2014.
  14. ^ a b c "Human Development Reports: Data". Attachment to Table 7. United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 12 Apr 2014.
  15. ^ Nancy Hatch Dupree, 1986
  16. ^ Dupree, Nancy Hatch (1986). Women in Afghanistan. Liestal : Stiftung Bibliotheca Afghanica.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Ahmed-Ghosh, Huma (May 2003). "A History of Women in Afghanistan: Lessons Learnt for the Future or Yesterdays and Tomorrow: Women in Afghanistan". Journal of International Women's Studies. 4 (3).
  18. ^ a b c Khan, Shahnaz (2001). "Between Here and There: Feminist Solidarity and Afghan Women". Genders (33).
  19. ^ Marsden, Peter (Feb 2002). The Taliban: War and Religion in Afghanistan (Revised ed.). London: Zed Books. p. 24. ISBN 978-1842771662.
  20. ^ Baker, Aryn (29 Jul 2010). "Afghan Women and the Return of the Taliban". Time Magazine.
  21. ^ Rostami-Povey, Elaheh (2007). "Gender, agency and identity, the case of Afghan women in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran". The Journal of Development Studie. 43 (2): 306.
  22. ^ a b Dupree, Nancy Hatch (25 August 2010). "Cultural Heritage and National Identity in Afghanistan". Third World Quarterly. 23 (5): 977–89. doi:10.1080/0143659022000028549.
  23. ^ Arlandson, James M. "Women are Inferior to Men in the Quran". Answering Islam. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
  24. ^ Quran 2:228
  25. ^ Quran 2:187
  26. ^ Quran 4.34
  27. ^ Quran 4.34
  28. ^ Quran 2:25
  29. ^ Quran 2.222
  30. ^ a b c d e Murdock, D.M. "What Does the Koran Say about Women". Freethought Nation. Retrieved 11 Apr 2014.
  31. ^ Quran 2:223
  32. ^ Quran, sura 2
  33. ^ Quran 4:15
  34. ^ Quran 4:32, 33:35
  35. ^ a b c d e Nawa, Fariba (2011). Opium Nation: Child Brides, Drug Lords, and One Woman's Journey Through Afghanistan. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061934704.
  36. ^ Appiah, Kwame Anthony (2010). "Wars Against Women," in The Honor Code: How Moral Revolutions Happen. New York: W.W. Norton and Co. pp. 137–72.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The State of the World's Children 2007". A Call for Equality. UNICEF. Retrieved 8 Jan 2014.
  38. ^ a b c "Afghanistan". What We Do: Health. Save the Children. Retrieved 11 April 2014.
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