Crisis in Afghanistan: Rights, Collapse, and Humanitarian Emergency

The crisis in Afghanistan is defined not only by economic collapse, but by the systematic erasure of women and girls from public life.”

In Protest. Gender-Based Repression, Resistance Movements, and the Struggle for Human Rights

Where gender-based repression is institutionalized, protest becomes both an act of resistance and a demand for recognition under international law.”

A Year of Taliban Rule: Repression, Economic Collapse, and Renewed Security Threats in Afghanistan

A year of Taliban rule has not marked a transition—it has marked a reversion.”

Afghanistan’s Economic Crisis: Sanctions, Financial Isolation, and the Collapse of State Function

Economic isolation has not only constrained governance—it has transferred the cost of political decisions directly onto the civilian population.”

International Sanctions – Coercive Policy Tools and the Limits of Enforcement

Sanctions signal international condemnation—but their success depends on enforcement, coordination, and political will.”