Essays about: "Afghanistan."
Showing result 21 - 25 of 218 essays containing the word Afghanistan..
-
21. Female Leadership Challenges : A Comparative Study Between Afghanistan and the Netherlands
University essay from Linnéuniversitetet/Institutionen för organisation och entreprenörskap (OE)Abstract : Although the topic is trending globally, clear steps forward for female leadership are yet to be made. This is impacted even more by the fact that little empirical research has been conducted to examine the attitudes towards females in managerial positions from different countries' point of view. READ MORE
-
22. Spatio-temporal analysis of groundwater-dependent precipitation based on Lagrangian moisture tracking
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Institutionen för naturgeografiAbstract : Groundwater abstraction for irrigation use has steadily increased over the past decades, resulting in additional evaporation to the atmosphere, and increased precipitation. The precipitation stemming from groundwater irrigation (or Groundwater-dependent precipitation) has received little attention during recent years and is solely researched by the Eulerian model. READ MORE
-
23. Being An Agent In Your Own Narrative Of [In]Securities:Creating Safe Spaces : Interpreting the life stories of Afghan women, a qualitative study
University essay from FörsvarshögskolanAbstract : With the recent take back of the country by the Taliban, Afghan women’s experiences of[in]security have again become top-of mind for many. Yet, this renewed focus perpetuates anexisting imagery of Afghan women as powerless victims, with a few rebellious heroines. READ MORE
-
24. Foreign aid at breaking points: A case study about how Sweden frames aid to Afghanistan
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Statsvetenskapliga institutionenAbstract : .... READ MORE
-
25. The Linguistic Representation of the Taliban in the Afghani Newspaper, Comparison Between Before and After the Power Change
University essay fromAbstract : Bearing in mind the big role media plays in shaping public opinion and the importance of understanding how ideologies can be conveyed to the public through language, this study uses qualitative analysis to investigate the discursive representation changes around the existence of the Taliban or what they call themselves now, the Islamic Emirate, in the Afghan media before and after the power shift. In specific, it illustrates how linguistic devices are used to transmit the discourse changes through the used language in the Afghani newspaper to legitimize or delegitimize having the Taliban in Afghanistan. READ MORE