Step 1 of 3. This form allows you to add a new citation to our database.
Our data says that the document:
Nikita, Brunner ; Alexander, Mihailov. (2023) Radical Religious Rule and Human Capital: Evidence from the Taliban Control in Afghanistan (1996-2001).
In: Economics Discussion Papers. RePEc:rdg:emxxdp:em-dp2023-01.
Full description at Econpapers
cites:
Indeed, if many former Mujaheddin warlords, including Masud, also were Islamicists, their ideology lay nowhere near that of the Taliban. 56 In Kabul, only one hospital was dedicated to women. Working in healthcare was the only profession women were still allowed to perform outside of home. 57 The Taliban eventually succeeded at forcing the UN to leave Kandahar. 58 Osama Bin Laden first came to Afghanistan alongside many Muslim radicals from all over the world during the Soviet war to help the Mujaheddin, but he then mostly used his wealth to spread Wahabbism and set up Al Qaeda. He returned to Saudi Arabia in 1990 and disapproved of the American intervention in Kuwait. The Americans remaining in Saudi Arabia after Kuwait’s liberation, he declared a Jihad to the US in 1996. He moved back to Afghanistan in 1996 and to Kandahar in 1997. He was then under Taliban protection.
but, as far as we know, such cited document is not available on RePEc.
If you know this information is not correct, you may help us to improve our service giving us the handle of the cited document in the box below. In this way, we could add the citation to CitEc.
Note that if you are the author of a cited document which it is not available on RePEc, you can submit a copy to the Munich Personal RePEc Archive (MPRA). Upload a paper now.