Abstract
Afghanistan represents a case in which the
erosion of political order due to armed
conflict and economic decline since 1978 has
resulted in major changes in the demography of the
country. Conflict has forced about one third of the
population to either take refuge outside Afghanistan,
mostly in Pakistan and Iran, or to move outside their
communities within Afghanistan. By 1990 about 6
million Afghans were living outside Afghanistan as
refugees (UNHCR, 2016). However, a new political
order arising after the fall of the Taliban regime in late
2001 changed this pattern. It affected migration and
internal displacement at three stages – renewal and
hope, the rise of insurgency and the triple transitions.
The establishment of a new political order based
on the principles of democracy and the emergence
of international consensus to stabilize Afghanistan
along with the flow of development and military aid
had positive impact on the return of Afghan refugees
to Afghanistan and of displaced people to their
communities inside Afghanistan. But the resurgence
of the Taliban and the deterioration in the security
situation after 2005 slowed down the return of
refugees
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 4-9 |
Journal | Migration Policy Practice |
Volume | 6 |
Issue number | 3 |
Publication status | Published - 2016 |