
impact of reproductive health services on armed conflict in Afghanistan
Author(s) -
Stewart Britten,
Wahida Paikan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of population and sustainability
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2398-5496
pISSN - 2398-5488
DOI - 10.3197/jps.2019.3.2.33
Subject(s) - virtuous circle and vicious circle , armed conflict , family planning , economic growth , political science , development economics , medicine , environmental health , economics , population , law , research methodology , macroeconomics
Reduction of child mortality while coverage of family planning services remains low may render Afghanistan a testing ground for the theory of demographic transition. Meanwhile there is a vicious circle: young men lacking employment join the Taliban and so increase national insecurity, discouraging industry and reducing employment opportunities. For progress towards peace to be made and sustained, family planning, education and employment need to be major parts of the peace effort, and UN reports need to emphasise more which way the scales tip.