Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity

This paper explores the diverse links between land and power under conditions of conflict in Afghanistan, taking into account the complexities of Afghan society. These complexities are structured around interconnecting informal institutions and personalised relationships, culturally specific, divers...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adam Pain
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université de Provence 2013-06-01
Series:Revue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/remmm/7990
id doaj-247150e3d3084375b23f34ef2dff8e62
record_format Article
spelling doaj-247150e3d3084375b23f34ef2dff8e622020-12-17T13:28:17ZengUniversité de ProvenceRevue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée0997-13272105-22712013-06-01133638110.4000/remmm.7990Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexityAdam PainThis paper explores the diverse links between land and power under conditions of conflict in Afghanistan, taking into account the complexities of Afghan society. These complexities are structured around interconnecting informal institutions and personalised relationships, culturally specific, diverse and shifting patterns of social relations, and spatially specific patterns of land ownership inequalities. The paper draws on a decade of empirical fieldwork in Afghanistan and recent work on livelihood trajectories and the opium economy. An understanding of the evolution of land ownership and access issues needs to be associated with an appreciation of diverse and potentially contradictory long-term drivers of change in the rural economy. The first of these long-term drivers of change relates to the effects of conflict, not only on land but also of water access under conditions of an increasingly scarce water supply. The second driver relates both to the roles played by village elites and to the structural contrasts between villages located in the mountains and in the plains, with the latter displaying major inequalities in land ownership. The third driver relates to the declining economic role of land in rural livelihoods, given long-term agrarian change and falling farm sizes. An understanding of history is fundamental to explaining these phenomena. How such conflicts play out, and which social groups or individuals they involve, also depend to a large degree on spatial positioning.http://journals.openedition.org/remmm/7990Conflictpowerwaterlandsettlementvillage behaviour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam Pain
spellingShingle Adam Pain
Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
Revue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée
Conflict
power
water
land
settlement
village behaviour
author_facet Adam Pain
author_sort Adam Pain
title Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
title_short Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
title_full Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
title_fullStr Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
title_full_unstemmed Land, power and conflict in Afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
title_sort land, power and conflict in afghanistan: seeking to understand complexity
publisher Université de Provence
series Revue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée
issn 0997-1327
2105-2271
publishDate 2013-06-01
description This paper explores the diverse links between land and power under conditions of conflict in Afghanistan, taking into account the complexities of Afghan society. These complexities are structured around interconnecting informal institutions and personalised relationships, culturally specific, diverse and shifting patterns of social relations, and spatially specific patterns of land ownership inequalities. The paper draws on a decade of empirical fieldwork in Afghanistan and recent work on livelihood trajectories and the opium economy. An understanding of the evolution of land ownership and access issues needs to be associated with an appreciation of diverse and potentially contradictory long-term drivers of change in the rural economy. The first of these long-term drivers of change relates to the effects of conflict, not only on land but also of water access under conditions of an increasingly scarce water supply. The second driver relates both to the roles played by village elites and to the structural contrasts between villages located in the mountains and in the plains, with the latter displaying major inequalities in land ownership. The third driver relates to the declining economic role of land in rural livelihoods, given long-term agrarian change and falling farm sizes. An understanding of history is fundamental to explaining these phenomena. How such conflicts play out, and which social groups or individuals they involve, also depend to a large degree on spatial positioning.
topic Conflict
power
water
land
settlement
village behaviour
url http://journals.openedition.org/remmm/7990
work_keys_str_mv AT adampain landpowerandconflictinafghanistanseekingtounderstandcomplexity
_version_ 1724379427427581952