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AANCast

Podcast door Afghanistan Analysts Network

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Nieuws & Politiek

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Over AANCast

AANCast brings you the latest research and insights from the Afghanistan Analysts Network. Each episode features some of our most compelling reports, read by AAN authors and editors. Listen to The Daily Hustle, our series of first-person accounts on how everyday life has changed since the Taliban takeover, or tune into The Conversation, where our researchers and guest experts unpack AAN’s most in-depth analysis.Subscribe to hear thoughtful, evidence-based research and unique on-the-ground perspectives on Afghanistan every week.The Afghanistan Analysts Network is an independent non-profit policy research organisation which brings deep knowledge and experience to increase the understanding of Afghan realities at a time when in depth and on the ground research is increasingly scarce.

Alle afleveringen

7 afleveringen

aflevering Afghan Women Spoke: A People’s Tribunal listened artwork

Afghan Women Spoke: A People’s Tribunal listened

Afghan women may have been silenced in their own country, but in December 2025, they were given a very public platform to tell the world about life under the Taliban – The People’s Tribunal for the Women of Afghanistan. The tribunal took place in Europe, but Afghans were able to watch the hearings via satellite and online livestreams. Rachel Reid attended the hearings and interviewed many of those involved, bringing AANCAST this special report on the tribunal and its potential ramifications.  Shownotes: Rachel Reid’s report, Afghan Women Spoke: The People’s Tribunal for Afghan Women listened [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/rights-freedom/afghan-women-spoke-the-peoples-tribunal-for-afghan-women-listened/], was published in December 2025. The indictment, some of the testimony and verdict can be found on the website of the People’s Tribunal for Women of Afghanistan [https://afghanistantribunal.com/].  The Afghanistan Analysts Network’s vast archive of reports and articles can be found on our website, including a dossier of reports on women’s rights, which was collated in March 2025, Deepening Discrimination: A dossier of reports about Afghan women [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/dossiers/deepening-discrimination-a-dossier-of-reports-about-afghan-women/]. For more episodes of AANCast, please subscribe.  Picture: The People’s Tribunal for the Women of Afghanistan’s panel of judges read their final judgment during a session in The Hague. Photo: Rachel Reid, AAN, 11 December 2025.  Don’t forget to subscribe for regular listens from the team at AANCast and check out the Afghanistan Analysts Network [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/] website for more great research and analysis.

8 jan 2026 - 25 min
aflevering The Conversation: From Taliban morality police to suspected UK war crimes artwork

The Conversation: From Taliban morality police to suspected UK war crimes

AAN authors discuss three in depth reports: Kate Clark on what has changed in the year since the introduction of the ‘Vice and Virtue’ law in Afghanistan, Roxanna Shapour discusses a survey on men's views about the restrictions on women and finally, Rachel Reid gives a glimpse into her forthcoming report on alleged war crimes by British special forces in Afghanistan.  Duration: 31 minutes  Shownotes: The reports discussed in this episode are A year of Propagating Virtue and Preventing Vice: Enforcers and ‘enforced’ speak about the Emirate’s morality law [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/rights-freedom/a-year-of-propagating-virtue-and-preventing-vice-enforcers-and-enforced-speak-about-the-emirates-morality-law/ ] and In Pursuit of Virtue: Men’s views on the Islamic Emirate’s restrictions on women [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/themed-reports/rights-and-freedoms-themed-reports/in-pursuit-of-virtue-mens-views-on-the-islamic-emirates-restrictions-on-women/ ]. The report on potential war crimes by UK special forces has not yet been published, but you can read a little about it in this wider piece on accountability efforts in Afghanistan, A New Accountability Mechanism for Afghanistan: What the IIM-A can (and cannot) do [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/rights-freedom/a-new-accountability-mechanism-for-afghanistan-what-the-iim-a-can-and-canno].  Image: Taliban in front of the Vice and Virtue Ministry. Photo: Wakil Kohsar/AFP, 16 October 2024 Don’t forget to subscribe for regular listens from the team at AANCast and check out the Afghanistan Analysts Network [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/] website for more great research and analysis.

17 nov 2025 - 31 min
aflevering Are blood feuds on the way out? A special report from Khost province artwork

Are blood feuds on the way out? A special report from Khost province

Blood feuds have long been a feature of Afghan society, claiming countless lives and perpetuating conflict that sometimes spans generations. In recent decades, however, this has shifted, particularly as a young Afghans have begun to question tribal traditions. Original research by AAN’s Sharif Akram [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/sharif-akram/] in Khost province suggests that this shift in social norms springs from greater access to education and increased exposure to other cultures and values. His report is read by Rachel Reid [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/rachel-reid/].  Sharif Akram’s report, Breaking the Cycle of Centuries-old Violence: A decline in blood feuds in Khost province? [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/context-culture/breaking-the-cycle-of-centuries-old-violence-a-decline-in-blood-feuds-in-khost-province/] was published in August 2025. The report refers to another AAN paper by Lutz Rzehak, Doing Pashto [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2012/10/20110321LR-Pashtunwali-FINAL.pdf], published in 2011. In October 2025 Sharif Akram published another fascinating paper, The Turbaned Traders: The Taliban take over the urban economy [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/economy-development-environment/the-turbaned-traders-the-taliban-take-over-the-urban-economy/].   Photo: Chief of the Balkhel tribe. A long-standing feud over land and water has persisted between the Balkhel and the Sabari sub-tribes that inhabit eastern Khost and Paktia provinces for decades. Photo: Wakil Kosher/AFP, 22 April 2024 The Afghanistan Analyst’s Network vast archive of reports and articles can be found on our website [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/]. For more episodes of AANCast, please subscribe.  Don’t forget to subscribe for regular listens from the team at AANCast and check out the Afghanistan Analysts Network [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/] website for more great research and analysis.

10 nov 2025 - 37 min
aflevering The Daily Hustle: Afghans who fled the Iran-Israel war artwork

The Daily Hustle: Afghans who fled the Iran-Israel war

In this episide of the The Daily Hustle [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/category/the-daily-hustle/], we hear from an Afghan who had to flee Iran when conflict between Israel and Iran escalated in June 2025. The Iranian government’s drive to deport Afghans had already accelerated the pace of ‘returns’. However, for Afghans who had lived through years of conflict in their own country, the ominous drums of war served as a powerful catalyst to flee Iran. AAN’s Nur Khan Himmat heard the story of a man who left his home in Tehran and took his family to start life all over again, in Afghanistan. He spoke from a camp for returnees in Herat.  Duration: 15 minutes Shownotes: Roxanna Shapour [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/roxanna-shapour/] reads The Daily Hustle: Afghans flee the Iran-Israel war [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/the-daily-hustle/migration-the-daily-hustle/the-daily-hustle-afghans-flee-home-from-the-iran-israel-war/], based on an interview by Nur Khan Himmat [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/nur-khan-himmat/], first published in June 2025. For more on the expulsion of Afghans from Pakistan, please take a look at this story, also from June 2025: The Second Phase of Forced Returns from Pakistan: Afghans tell stories of hardship and misery [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/migration/the-second-phase-of-forced-returns-from-pakistan-afghans-tell-stories-of-hardship-and-misery/]  For more Daily Hustles [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/category/the-daily-hustle/ ], stories of one struggle in one Afghan’s life, look back at our archive here:  Photo: Afghan families, who have been deported from Iran, rest with their belongings at the Islam Qala border crossing, by Wakil Kohsar/AFP, 28 June 2025  #Afghanistan #Taliban #Iran #Refugees #Returnees #AAN Don’t forget to subscribe for regular listens from the team at AANCast and check out the Afghanistan Analysts Network [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/] website for more great research and analysis.

3 okt 2025 - 15 min
aflevering The Conversation: Authors discuss the best of AAN’s reports artwork

The Conversation: Authors discuss the best of AAN’s reports

Every month AANCast dives into some of our longer reports, to give you a flavour of our in-depth reporting, in discussion with a range of authors. In this episode, we’re looking what to expect from the arrest warrants from the International Criminal Court for two Taliban for the international crime of gender persecution, with Rachel Reid [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/rachel-reid/] and Ehsan Qaane [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/ehsan-qaane/], while AAN’s Kate Clark talks us through her report on the impact of massive American aid cuts to Afghanistan, and Roxanna Shapour pulls out a gem from AAN’s massive archive, a report delving into the question: Why don’t most Afghan men like naming their wives and daughters in public?  Shownotes: To read the full story of the ICC's arrest warrants, see: Reigniting the Flames of Justice: ICC seeks arrest of the Islamic Emirate’s Supreme Leader and Chief Justice [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/rights-freedom/reigniting-the-flames-of-justice-icc-seeks-arrest-of-the-islamic-emirates-supreme-leader-and-chief-justice/], by Rachel Reid [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/rachel-reid/]. This article was published in January when the request for warrants was made; they were approved by the ICC in July. You can find lots of background on Afghanistan and the ICC on AAN’s website, including this 2022 piece by Ehsan Qaane [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/ehsan-qaane/]: ICC Afghanistan Investigation Re-Authorised: But will it cover the CIA, ISKP and the forces of the Islamic Republic, as well as the Taleban? [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/rights-freedom/icc-afghanistan-investigation-re-authorised-but-will-it-cover-the-cia-iskp-and-the-forces-of-the-islamic-republic-as-well-as-the-taleban/]. Kate Clark [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/kate-clark/] discusses her May 2025 report: The End of US Aid to Afghanistan: What will it mean for families, services and the economy? [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/economy-development-environment/the-end-of-us-aid-to-afghanistan-what-will-it-mean-for-families-services-and-the-economy/], while Roxanna Shapour [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/roxanna-shapour/] selected What’s in a Woman’s Name? No name, no public persona [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/rights-freedom/whats-in-a-womans-name-no-name-no-public-persona/] by Rohullah Suroush [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/pubauthor/rohullah-sorush/] from AAN’s archive. Subscribe for regular listens from the team at AANCast. Photo: ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan, who requested arrest warrants for the Emirate’s Supreme Leader and Chief Justice. #Afghanistan #Taliban #ICC #WarCrimes #WomensRights  #USAID #Trump  Don’t forget to subscribe for regular listens from the team at AANCast and check out the Afghanistan Analysts Network [https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/] website for more great research and analysis.

3 okt 2025 - 25 min
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