Five years after the U.S.-led invasion—and despite intense violence in some regions—about half of Afghans (53%) say they feel safer today than they did under Taliban rule. But the results vary widely according to religious sect, ethnicity and region, a Gallup poll has found
Are civilian attitudes a useful predictor of patterns of violence in civil wars? A prominent debate...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
Abstract Why do people respond differently to an apparently equal security threat, and which factor...
A new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll of the Afghan public finds an overwhelming majority opposes al-Qae...
As the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO forces from Afghanistan continues in 2014, many are now concerned...
As 2006 draws to a close, observers of Afghanistan generally agree that conditions there are worseni...
A new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll of nations around the world finds that most publics polled believe...
Four years have passed since the United States' Operation Enduring Freedom toppled the Taliban regim...
Most Pakistanis now see the Pakistani Taliban as well as al Qaeda as a critical threat to the countr...
This paper represents one of the most recent and pertinent studies conducted in Afghanistan, aiming ...
There was an atmosphere of hope in Afghanistan in February 2020, when the United States and the Tali...
A large majority of Afghans approve of the recent expansion of the NATO peacekeeping force beyond th...
Afghanistan is a profoundly insecure country, with a very high rate of insurgent violence affecting ...
Pakistanis show only weak support for using force against Islamic militants and overwhelmingly oppos...
For a decade all the leaders of Central Asia have agreed that the situation in Afghanistan poses a...
Are civilian attitudes a useful predictor of patterns of violence in civil wars? A prominent debate...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
Abstract Why do people respond differently to an apparently equal security threat, and which factor...
A new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll of the Afghan public finds an overwhelming majority opposes al-Qae...
As the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO forces from Afghanistan continues in 2014, many are now concerned...
As 2006 draws to a close, observers of Afghanistan generally agree that conditions there are worseni...
A new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll of nations around the world finds that most publics polled believe...
Four years have passed since the United States' Operation Enduring Freedom toppled the Taliban regim...
Most Pakistanis now see the Pakistani Taliban as well as al Qaeda as a critical threat to the countr...
This paper represents one of the most recent and pertinent studies conducted in Afghanistan, aiming ...
There was an atmosphere of hope in Afghanistan in February 2020, when the United States and the Tali...
A large majority of Afghans approve of the recent expansion of the NATO peacekeeping force beyond th...
Afghanistan is a profoundly insecure country, with a very high rate of insurgent violence affecting ...
Pakistanis show only weak support for using force against Islamic militants and overwhelmingly oppos...
For a decade all the leaders of Central Asia have agreed that the situation in Afghanistan poses a...
Are civilian attitudes a useful predictor of patterns of violence in civil wars? A prominent debate...
Afghanistan’s Taliban are back in power. How did they get there? How can their discriminatory polici...
Abstract Why do people respond differently to an apparently equal security threat, and which factor...