The collapse of the Afghan government this summer and the resurgence of the Taliban have been widely regarded as a policy failure following two decades of US involvement in the country. Joseph Stull and Sarah Young look at the lessons from US policy failure in Afghanistan, arguing that policymakers must do more to evaluate policies as they implemented, speed up the policymaking process, spend more time listening to those affected by their policies, and think more closely about policies’ potential outcomes
When it wants to promote democracy in other countries, the US has a number of options, ranging from ...
A newly published special issue of LSE Public Policy Review aims to provide an in-depth analysis of ...
This is the first mine action strategic plan to be developed in consultation with all relevant mine ...
For almost 35 years, US presidential administrations have set out their foreign policy and national ...
Last summer, the US ended its 20-year presence in Afghanistan, withdrawing its remaining troops and ...
The Taliban has taken control of Kabul and declared victory in its attempt to establish control over...
On 10 July 2017, the LSE's Department of International Development hosted an event on The Role of Hi...
In light of the fall of Kabul to the Taliban, Afghanistan is back in the news, and Afghanistan exper...
Discussing DDR in Afghanistan mightseem incongruous as fighting rages between government forces and ...
Despite improved education, highways, and myriad other rural development projects, Afghanistan conti...
This article examines the politics of 'seeing' civilians in Afghanistan with a focus on the 2009 Kun...
Both the US and the Taliban declared the 29 February peace agreement a victory. Here Emrah Ozdemir (...
Despite friendly relations between the two countries, the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan has been...
The discussion about the Taliban’s rule in Afghanistan since August 2021 has had many facets. The fo...
Meetra Qutb (Independent Researcher and Consultant, UK) explains how Afghanistan’s constitution prom...
When it wants to promote democracy in other countries, the US has a number of options, ranging from ...
A newly published special issue of LSE Public Policy Review aims to provide an in-depth analysis of ...
This is the first mine action strategic plan to be developed in consultation with all relevant mine ...
For almost 35 years, US presidential administrations have set out their foreign policy and national ...
Last summer, the US ended its 20-year presence in Afghanistan, withdrawing its remaining troops and ...
The Taliban has taken control of Kabul and declared victory in its attempt to establish control over...
On 10 July 2017, the LSE's Department of International Development hosted an event on The Role of Hi...
In light of the fall of Kabul to the Taliban, Afghanistan is back in the news, and Afghanistan exper...
Discussing DDR in Afghanistan mightseem incongruous as fighting rages between government forces and ...
Despite improved education, highways, and myriad other rural development projects, Afghanistan conti...
This article examines the politics of 'seeing' civilians in Afghanistan with a focus on the 2009 Kun...
Both the US and the Taliban declared the 29 February peace agreement a victory. Here Emrah Ozdemir (...
Despite friendly relations between the two countries, the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan has been...
The discussion about the Taliban’s rule in Afghanistan since August 2021 has had many facets. The fo...
Meetra Qutb (Independent Researcher and Consultant, UK) explains how Afghanistan’s constitution prom...
When it wants to promote democracy in other countries, the US has a number of options, ranging from ...
A newly published special issue of LSE Public Policy Review aims to provide an in-depth analysis of ...
This is the first mine action strategic plan to be developed in consultation with all relevant mine ...