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ISLAMIC EMIRATE OF AFGHANISTAN (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   113534


Islamic emirate of Afghanistan: a layeha [rules and regulations] for mujahidin / Niaz A. Shah (Tr)   Journal Article
Niaz A. Shah Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   189801


Rise and fall of the taliban / Shchedrov, R   Journal Article
Shchedrov, R Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract THE fall of Mohammad Najibullah's regime in April 1992 led to the capture of Kabul by Afghan Mujahideen units, which subsequently faced a number of problems. The new authorities inherited state symbols (namely the capital), but state mechanisms were not functioning - the political elite had left the country, the army was divided along ethnic and religious lines, and the state had no institutions capable of generating income and managing economic resources.
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3
ID:   158959


Taliban’s Islamic emirate of Afghanistan (1996–2001): war-making and state-making’ as an insurgency strategy / Ibrahimi, S Yaqub   Journal Article
Ibrahimi, S Yaqub Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper examines the institutional and functional aspects of the Taliban’s Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA). The Taliban’s coercive approach and its entire reliance on “war-making” to “state-making” shows the difficulty of the transformation of an insurgent group into a state structure. The Taliban was primarily capable of establishing a two-track system of governance. However, the assessment of the IEA’s institutional and functional capabilities shows that the military–political organization formed by the Taliban lacked statehood in all three areas of legitimacy, authority and capacity.
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