AFGHANISTAN INDEX
Tracking Progress and Security in Post-9/11 Afghanistan
The Afghanistan Index is a statistical compilation of economic, public opinion and security data. This resource will provide updated and historical information on various data, including crime, infrastructure, casualties, unemployment, Afghan security forces and coalition troop strength.
The index is designed to assemble the best possible quantitative indicators of the international community’s counterinsurgency and nation-building efforts in Afghanistan, to track them over time, and to offer an objective set of criteria for benchmarking performance. It serves as an in-depth, non-partisan assessment of American and international efforts in Afghanistan, and is based primarily on U.S. government, Afghan government and NATO data. Although measurements of progress in any nation-building effort can never be reduced to purely quantitative data, a comprehensive compilation of such information can provide a clearer picture and contribute to a healthier and better informed debate.
Ian S. Livingston, Heather L. Messera and Michael O'Hanlon spearhead the Afghanistan Index project at Brookings. Livingston and Messera are senior research assistants in Foreign Policy at Brookings. Michael O'Hanlon is a senior fellow and director of research in Foreign Policy.
For progress and security statistics on Iraq and Pakistan, see the Iraq Index and Pakistan Index.
Archives:
(all files are in PDF format; the final file of each month is archived)
October 30, 2009 September 23, 2009 August 18, 2009 July 29, 2009 June 24, 2009 May 26, 2009 April 28, 2009 March 30, 2009 February 24, 2009 January 21, 2009 December 16, 2008 November 18, 2008 October 28, 2008 September 30, 2008 August 26, 2008 August 04, 2008 |