Stanford, Jan
22 : As Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai meets with President
Obama in Washington this week, and the Senate prepares to consider Mr. Obama’s
nomination of Chuck Hagel for Secretary of Defense, now seems like an apt time
for reflection on the US strategy in Afghanistan.
In particular, what
does America’s approach to Afghanistan’s educational needs reveal about its
long-term goals for the country?
Last fall, in a brief and unceremonious
election, I became the co-director of a small group – the Afghanistan Legal
Education Project– at Stanford Law School. Our organization works with academics
in Kabul to write law textbooks for young Afghans.
Early visions of
prestige notwithstanding, I’ve learned by now that my duties are mostly
administrative – editing, scheduling, sending cajoling emails. But for all that
the job lacks in diplomatic glamour, it comes with an unusual perk. Each week, I
host a Skype call with our American teaching fellow in Kabul. Over time, her
insight has come to serve as a healthy source of perspective: a sense that
Afghanistan is more sophisticated – and resilient – than many pundits and
politicians suggest. America’s approach to its future should be,
too.
Jenn Round is our longest serving teaching fellow, and she’s been
reporting back from Kabul for more than 18 months. When our weekly calls began,
she and I mostly stuck to discussing the project. Now, however, when there is
little textbook business to discuss, we fill the time with other
topics.
It’s in this way, through secondhand snippets about Jenn’s
students, that I’ve learned the textured details of student life in Kabul. I’ve
heard stories about a new “law club,” job-market jitters, even fledgling
romances. For one hour each week, the lives of Jenn’s students are transmitted
across continents, and reassemble themselves in my San Francisco
apartment.
These are more than idle tangents. They serve as reminders
that Afghanistan is not simply a place where military strategies play themselves
out. It is home to a population of individuals with vibrant lives, personal
ambitions, and, as history attests, ample capacity for endurance.
Much of
our focus on Afghanistan is on the upcoming withdrawal of US troops (which the
Obama administration has made clear will be concluded in 2014). We argue about
failures and successes, profits and losses. Almost invariably, somewhere beneath
these discussions lies an unwieldy question: What happens next?
America’s
military presence is an important issue for Afghanistan, but it is not all
encompassing. Afghanistan has experienced such transitions before, and the
choice it now faces is not necessarily between cataclysmic violence and
peace.
In short, the question is not solely one of what happens next in
Afghanistan. It is about how Americans and the international community decide to
contribute, regardless of what happens.
To that end, a basic tenet of our
project is that legal knowledge, once provided, cannot be taken away. The
learning that a student receives in a classroom may lie dormant. It may be
tested and challenged. But it has a stubborn, intractable quality. It is far
more difficult to destroy than roads or infrastructure.
In keeping with
these long-term ideas, at the Afghanistan Legal Education Project, we believe
that one manner in which to approach uncertainty is to prepare a small cohort
for the future: a group of Afghans that has studied other legal systems as well
as its own; a group with sufficient education to articulate ideas before an
electorate; and a group empowered to embrace, and protect, a collective form of
Afghan government.
Legal education, in short, is concomitant with – maybe
even requisite to – long-term security.
Several months ago, our
organization came one step closer to fulfilling these ideals. Our project is now
the grateful recipient of a $7.2 million grant from the US State Department.
That money will allow us to embark on a project that has been a long time in the
making: the development of a fully accredited law school in Kabul. Several years
from now, a small group of Afghan students – the first of its kind in many
respects – will graduate with internationally recognized legal
degrees.
To some, this may sound naive. There are those who argue that,
without robust security, no progress can be made in Afghanistan. Perhaps, from
America’s vantage, the fewer resources we expend in the lead up to the troop
withdrawal, the better.
But if I had Jenn on the line right now, she
would argue differently. We can remain conscious of uncertainty, she’d say,
without abandoning our efforts. She’d remind me that the development of legal
education in Afghanistan is likely to be the work of generations, rather than
years.
She’d be right, of course – and, in delivering her message, she’d
have articulated a complex, realistic, portrayal of Afghanistan. Policymakers
and politicians, and the American people whose backing they seek, would do well
to remember this more nuanced picture. That means US efforts to support
education and the development of Afghan civil society should not be abandoned.
Just as it means that these initiatives may require the patience – and
persistence – of many years to bear fruit.
Julian Simcock is the student
co-director of the Afghanistan Legal Education Project at Stanford Law School.
The project works with academics in Kabul to develop legal curricula for the
American University in Afghanistan, and is now developing a full, five year
integrated law degree program. Julian and several other students traveled to
Afghanistan in February 2012.
Ends
SA/EN
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What legal education could do for a resilient Afghanistan
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