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Asia

TURKMENISTAN: CHANGES AND STABILITY UNDER BERDIMUHAMEDOW

The most closed and understudied country in Central Asia, Turkmenistan has been facing profound evolutions since the death of its first president, Saparmurat Niyazov, in December 2006.

Sunday، 29 October، 2017

UZBEKISTAN: Political Order, Societal Changes, and Cultural Transformation

Marlene Laruelle, editor Academic knowledge on Uzbekistan blossomed in the 1990s, before drying up in the 2000s and 2010s with the closure of the country and the increased difficulty of doing fieldwork. However, research has […]

Sunday، 29 October، 2017

Kazakhstan: Nation-Branding, Economic Trials, and Cultural Changes

Edit by Marlene Laruelle The economic driver of Central Asia, Kazakhstan stands up for its forward-looking branding and its multivectoral foreign policy. Behind its many successes, the country has been facing difficulties in managing its relationship […]

Sunday، 29 October، 2017

KYRGYZSTAN: Political pluralism and economic challenges

Kyrgyzstan has been the most studied country in Central Asia, due to its openness to Western observers and the substantial presence of foreign institutions in its higher education system.

Sunday، 29 October، 2017

Why 1997 Asian Crisis Lessons Lost

Various different, and sometimes contradictory lessons have been drawn from the 1997-1998 East Asian crises. Rapid or V-shaped recoveries and renewed growth in most developing countries in the new century also served to postpone the urgency of far-reaching reforms.

Sunday، 29 October، 2017

Special SIMORGH PEACE PRIZE: Armanshahr HR & Civil Society NEWSLETTER?No.206-208 (YEAR IX)

Read New bilingual issue of Armanshahr Human Rights and Civil SocietyNewsletter, Special SIMORGH PEACE PRIZE, No.206-208 (YEAR IX)

Monday، 9 October، 2017

A Region at Risk: The Human Dimensions of Climate Change in Asia and the Pacific

Asia & the Pacific is exposed to climate change impacts. Home to the majority of the world’s poor, the population is vulnerable to those impacts. Unabated warming could largely diminish previous economic achievements putting the future of the region at risk.

Thursday، 20 July، 2017

Adilur Rahman Khan; Prominent human rights defender detained ahead of death penalty conference

The Observatory has been informed with great concern about the arbitrary arrest in Kuala Lumpur of Mr. Adilur Rahman Khan, Secretary of the human rights non-governmental organisation Odhikar, also a member of OMCT General Assembly and FIDH Vice-President.

Thursday، 20 July، 2017

India’s Abortion Epidemic

Source: The Diplomat By: By Ritu Mahendru Despite health risks, middle class women in India are increasingly resorting to unlicensed abortions. India’s kitty party culture provides a common place where women get together on a monthly basis and discuss […]

Wednesday، 12 July، 2017

‘Will I ever get justice?’: Nepal accused of failing trafficking survivors

Source: The Guardian By Pete Pattisson Rights groups claim no one has received compensation since law entitling survivors of human trafficking was introduced a decade ago Rights groups in Nepal say they do not know of […]

Saturday، 10 June، 2017