Published: Oct. 11, 2021
event poster

Monday, October 18 at 4pm MDT

Over the past few months, Afghanistan has experienced the US withdrawal, the Taliban takeover,  the fall of the US backed government, followed by a chaotic evacuation of some but not all Afghans allied with US.  The panelists will provide details based on their own experiences of US engagements in Afghanistan, the evacuation efforts, and the realities of Taliban rule.

Speakers:

Jennifer Fluri is a Professor of Geography, and a feminist political geographer concentrating on conflict, security, and aid/development in South and Southwest Asia. Jennifer is particularly interested in understanding the spatial organization and corporeal representations and experiences of individuals and groups working and living within conflict zones.

Sayeed Naqibullah: 
Living under Taliban Rule
Sayed Naqibullah was born and raised in Afghanistan. He has worked with expats in Afghanistan and now lives in Colorado.  

Zareen Taj:
The Fate of Ethnic Minorities under Taliban Rule
Zareen Taj is a women’s rights and human rights activist. She is currently an LLC Ph.D. student at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County.

Zalad Ahmad:  
Now What? The Economics of being an Afghan Woman in Today’s Afghanistan
Zalad Ahmad, founder of HOLD, and Afghan NGO, has over 15 years of experience working in the field of international development, with a focus on education, human rights, and economic development. She is deeply committed to social and economic progress in her home country of Afghanistan and has a passion for rectifying social justice and gender equality through education and economic empowerment of Afghan women. Throughout her career, Zala has operated in some of the most remote and precarious areas of rural Afghanistan. Zala earned a M.A. in International Economics and Finance from Brandeis University, as a Fulbright scholar. She is a Research Associate in the Department of Geography at the ÀÖ²¥´«Ã½-Boulder.

Sponsored by
Center for Asian Studies
Department of Geography
Department of History
Department of Women and Gender Studies
Department of Sociology
Department of Anthropology
International Affairs Program
and the International Business Circle

Registration limited to the first 300.