This article investigates the securitisation of the higher education sector in Afghanistan by examining ‘hidden’ non-discursive practices as opposed to overt discursive threat construction. Non-discursive practices are framed by the habitus inherited from different social fields, whereas in Afghanistan, securitising actors converge from different habitus (e.g., institutions, professions, backgrounds) to bar the ‘other’ ethnic or social groups from resources and spaces which could empower these groups to become a pertinent threat, a fear, and a danger to the monopoly of the state elites over the state power and resources. The most prominent securitisation practices emerging from the data include mainly (1) the obstruction of the formation of...
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis. This article evaluates the political dynamics of the 2014 preside...
This paper describes the crucial issues and challenges facing Afghanistan’s universities as they beg...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
This article investigates the securitisation of the higher education sector in Afghanistan by examin...
In conflict-affected societies, educational development is often affected by the struggles waged by ...
This article invites academics and policy analysts to examine the mechanisms and legacy of NATO's se...
This article explores practices of (de)securitisation in a setting where securitisation, violence an...
The 2001 invasion and subsequent occupation consolidated ethnicity as a political force in Afghanis...
This study examines the repercussions of the war on terror and subsequent occupation of Afghanistan,...
The purpose of this study was to see whether the Taliban regime poses a threat to the international ...
This article evaluates the role of higher education (HE) in peacebuilding in post-2001 Afghanistan. ...
The military intervention in Afghanistan in 2001 was portrayed as a fight to oust the extremist Tali...
The field of development has known many subtle, yet important changes in terms of objectives. As Jo ...
This thesis examines dynamics of statebuilding and social mobilisation in Afghanistan from 2001...
This paper examines higher education in Afghanistan. Based on qualitative research, including interv...
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis. This article evaluates the political dynamics of the 2014 preside...
This paper describes the crucial issues and challenges facing Afghanistan’s universities as they beg...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
This article investigates the securitisation of the higher education sector in Afghanistan by examin...
In conflict-affected societies, educational development is often affected by the struggles waged by ...
This article invites academics and policy analysts to examine the mechanisms and legacy of NATO's se...
This article explores practices of (de)securitisation in a setting where securitisation, violence an...
The 2001 invasion and subsequent occupation consolidated ethnicity as a political force in Afghanis...
This study examines the repercussions of the war on terror and subsequent occupation of Afghanistan,...
The purpose of this study was to see whether the Taliban regime poses a threat to the international ...
This article evaluates the role of higher education (HE) in peacebuilding in post-2001 Afghanistan. ...
The military intervention in Afghanistan in 2001 was portrayed as a fight to oust the extremist Tali...
The field of development has known many subtle, yet important changes in terms of objectives. As Jo ...
This thesis examines dynamics of statebuilding and social mobilisation in Afghanistan from 2001...
This paper examines higher education in Afghanistan. Based on qualitative research, including interv...
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis. This article evaluates the political dynamics of the 2014 preside...
This paper describes the crucial issues and challenges facing Afghanistan’s universities as they beg...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...