Afghanistan: Long War, Forgotten Peace – Michael Cox (Ed.)

Editor: Michael Cox
Publisher: Lse Press
Year of Publication: 2022
Print Length: 314 pages
Genre: Academic / Essay, Non-Fiction / Cultural Studies, Non-Fiction / History, Non-Fiction / Politics & Political Science, Non-Fiction / Social Science
Area: Afghanistan
Topic: Crisis / Crises, History, International Law, Peace, Politics & Power, Taliban, War, Woman and Femininity
Afghanistan has been in the headlines for many years – but tragically for all the wrong reasons. First invaded by the Soviets in 1979, the country then experienced the trauma of civil war followed by yet another intervention, this time by the United States and allies, which ended with the West’s ignominious withdrawal in August 2021. Afghanistan: Long War, Forgotten Peace examines multiple dimensions of what happened and why, and what the future holds for the country now the Taliban are back in power.
Multidisciplinary in approach, this book features analysts from a variety of academic disciplines, including policy-makers and public intellectuals – many with direct experience of having lived and worked in Afghanistan. It explains why the Taliban finally triumphed, what this means for Afghan society, and how competing actors in the international system have reacted to the Taliban takeover. Questions include whether the West’s withdrawal represented a major or only a temporary setback for NATO and the United States, and whether and how there can be any amelioration of the situation in Afghanistan itself. The country and its people face multiple interrelated challenges, including those of women’s rights, the drugs economies and human trafficking and exploitation.
This volume is essential reading for all those concerned with what happens in Afghanistan over the coming months and years, the consequences for the Afghan people – and for the rest of the world.
Table of Contents
Editor
Contributors
- Introduction – Before and After the Towers:
Afghanistan’s Forty-Year Crisis – Michael Cox - Afghanistan: Learning from History? – Rodric Braithwaite
Three Sins: The Disconnect Between de jure
Institutions and de facto Power in Afghanistan – Michael Callen and Shahim Kabuli - Self-Defence and its Dangerous Variants:
Afghanistan and International Law – Devika Hovell and Michelle Hughes - Why Did the Taliban Win (Again) in Afghanistan? – Florian Weigand
- The Rise and Fall of Women’s Rights in Afghanistan – Nargis Nehan
- Women, War, and the Politics of Emancipation in
Afghanistan – Afzal Ashraf and Caroline Kennedy-Pipe - Human Trafficking in Afghanistan – What Hope
for Change? – Thi Hoang - Opium, Meth and the Future of International Drug
- Control in Taliban Afghanistan – John Collins, Shehryar Fazli and Ian Tennant
- Operationally Agile but Strategically Lacking:NATO’s Bruising Years in Afghanistan – Sten Rynning and Paal Sigurd Hilde
- Biden’s Realism, US Restraint, and the Future of the Transatlantic Partnership – Leslie Vinjamuri
- China’s New Engagement with Afghanistan after the Withdrawal Feng Zhang

Michael Cox is a Founding Director of LSE IDEAS. He was Director of LSE IDEAS between 2008 and 2019 and now holds a senior fellowship. He is also Emeritus Professor of International Relations at LSE.
He was appointed to a Chair at the LSE in 2002, having previously held positions in the UK at The Queen’s University of Belfast and the Department of International Politics, Aberystwyth. He helped establish the Cold War Studies Centre at the LSE in 2004 and later co-founded LSE IDEAS in 2008 with Arne Westad.
He is the author, editor and co-editor of several volumes including works on the Cold War, US foreign policy, the former Soviet Union, war and peace in Northern Ireland and the international thought of E. H. Carr. His most recent work includes a centennial edition of J. M. Keynes’s, ‘The Economic Consequences of the Peace’ (Palgrave, 2019), a collection of his own essays ‘Agonies of Empire: American Power from Clinton to Biden’ (Bristol University Press, 2022), ‘Afghanistan: Long War to Forgotten Peace’ (LSE Press, 2022) and Ukraine: Russia’s War and the Future of Global Order’ ( LSE Press, 2023)
Source: https://www.lse.ac.uk/ideas/people/cox-mick
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