TITLE

SOUTH ASIA AFTER AFGHANISTAN

AUTHOR(S)
Ehteshami, A.
PUB. DATE
July 1986
SOURCE
Contemporary Review;Jul86, Vol. 249 Issue 1446, p8
SOURCE TYPE
Periodical
DOC. TYPE
Literary Criticism
ABSTRACT
The article focuses on the conditions of South Asia in Afghanistan. In the Summer of 1853 Karl Marx put forward a view about the non-industrialized and colonized world seemingly in total opposition to his contribution to liberating radical movements and thought in Europe. Writing at the height of the British Empire, Marx argued that the only possible way for India's social development was through the continued rule of the British. The lack of interest of the United States in Afghanistan in the decade after the Second World War facilitated a movement by the Afghan government towards the Soviet Union after 1955, which in turn coincided with the fundamental change in the Soviet Union's own perception of the Third World, and the advancement of her interests in the Middle East and South Asia after Stalin's death.
ACCESSION #
15935065

Tags: AFGHAN War, 2001-;  AFGHANISTAN -- Social conditions;  SOCIAL planning;  SOCIAL policy

 

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