An excess of corruption and a deficit of toilets: american and Karzai’s ‘successes’ in Afghanistan

  • Marc W. Herold University of New Hampshire
Palavras-chave: EUA, Afeganistão, Guerra, Política Internacional

Resumo

Afghanistan might be characterized as having a paucity of toilets and an excess of corruption. These two aspects capture the post-Taliban essence of the country. The “achievements” of Hamid Karzai the de facto mayor of Kabul, the United States and NATO in Afghanistan after more than eight years of U.S. occupation and approximately $25 billion in disbursed (2001-9) non-military aid, include Afghanistan being ranked as the worst place in the world for sanitation (per UNICEF data) and in 2009 posting 179th (out of 180 countries) in Transparency International’s corruption-perceptions index. The latter figure for 2005 showed Afghanistan ranking 117th out of 159 countries.

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Biografia do Autor

Marc W. Herold, University of New Hampshire
Department of Economics, Whittemore School of Business & Economics. University of New Hampshire, Durham, N.H. 03824, U.S.A.
Publicado
2010-10-05
Como Citar
Herold, M. W. (2010). An excess of corruption and a deficit of toilets: american and Karzai’s ‘successes’ in Afghanistan. Revista Espaço Acadêmico, 10(113), 130-140. Recuperado de https://periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/EspacoAcademico/article/view/11354