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Afghanistan 101 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R574
Discovery Miles 5 740
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Afghanistan 101 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R574
Discovery Miles 5 740
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Afghanistan 101 is an introduction to Afghan culture. More
specifically, this dimensional analysis discusses Power Distance
(PD), Uncertainty Avoidance (UA), Individualism (IND), and
Masculinity (MAS) in the Afghan national culture. These dimensions
are based on the work of the well-known Dutch anthropologist Geert
Hofestede. The manifestations of these cultural dimensions explain
the attitudes and actions of Afghans. Each chapter on dimensions
also includes a section where the implications of a particular
dimension are pointed out to the Westerner working in
Afghanistan.Power Distance, the first dimension of culture,
describes the relationship between a less powerful person and a
more powerful one. As Afghanistan is on the high side of PD, social
power is coercive in Afghanistan. One comes to power by force and
is ousted by force; wealth and power are inseparable; decision
making is autocratic and consultative; expert power does not carry
much weight; age and charisma are important; and in Afghanistan, it
is the authority of the person rather than the authority of
position or rule that counts most.Uncertainty avoidance, the second
dimension, involves dealing with fear and ambiguity-fear of nature,
fear of other men, and fear of the supernatural. UA is negatively
related to PD. A high PD society is on the low side of UA. Cultures
use three methods to deal with fear and ambiguity: law, technology,
and religion. Being on the low side of UA, Afghans rely heavily on
Islam to reduce fear and uncertainty because they cannot rely on
technology or the rule of law. The fundamental religious beliefs
that help Afghans cope with fear and uncertainty are (1) life in
this world temporary, (2) the source of both good and evil is God,
and (3) God is just and will punish the oppressors and evil-doers
in this world and in the next.Individualism versus collectivism,
the third dimension of culture, relates to the relationship of an
individual to a collectivity. In nonindividualistic societies such
as Afghanistan, one's loyalty and devotion is first and foremost to
the family, ethnic or other collectivity, rather than to the
country as a whole. Such loyalties are characteristic of
nonnation-states, and are best explained as "Afghan nationalism"
that is based on ethnicity, sect, region, and ideology.Afghanistan
is not and has never been a nation-state. In a nation-state, people
rally around the constitution, the flag, the national anthem, and
other such symbols instead of their ethnicity, sect, region,
ideology, and so on. Furthermore, a nation-state is based on the
rule of law, checks and balances, human rights, freedom of the
press, political parties, free and fair elections, accountability,
and transparency. The concept of a nation-state is a Western
phenomenon, although the roots of a nation-state are deep in some
Islamic countries, shallow in others, and nonexistent in others.
Turkey, the first Islamic country to have become a nation-state,
falls into the first category whereas Afghanistan, into the last.
For Afghanistan to move in the direction of becoming a
nation-state, some type of federalism may be the only way to
prevent further ethnic conflict and another civil war. Masculinity,
the fourth dimension of culture, describes the degree to which
there is a gender gap within a culture. Afghanistan is on the high
side of MAS. As such, sex roles are set in the family and are
reinforced in the schools, workplace, and other social
organizations. In general, males are taught to be assertive and
females, nurturing. In Afghan society, male assertiveness generally
involves aggressiveness, bravery, endurance, leadership, power,
dominance, and independence. Female nurturance, on the other hand,
is characterized by submissiveness, patience, tenderness, and
affection.It is Islamic fundamentalism and Afghan cultural
tradition, rather than mainstream Islam, that limits the rights of
women in Afghanistan, making the country a high MAS culture. T
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