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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 20 page paper that includes an abstract and a 4 page annotated bibliography. The essay begins with background information regarding the development plan and millennium development goals. It discusses U.S. involvement, including activities already accomplished. The writer reports the budget year in the U.S. as compared to the Afghan budget year and discusses the differences in holidays, workdays and work weeks. 1 Table included. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Page Count:
20 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGafgbd.RTF
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
are briefly explained. This information provides insight into where the country is intending to go, a democratic Islamic state. Along with many other countries, the U.S. has been directly involved,
in fact, it is the largest donor to the country in terms of funds and other resources. The U.S. has already completed many different jobs, such as building or rebuilding
thousands of miles of road and hundreds of schools and health clinics. The U.S. fiscal year and the federal budget year is different than the Afghan fiscal year and budget
year. Also, workdays are different as are work weeks. There is also a vast difference between the national holidays in the U.S. and the national and religious holidays in Afghanistan.
The question asked is how to best synchronize the two budget calendars. The writer, after providing a great deal of background, does not believe the issue synchronizing the budget
years but rather, strongly attending to other issues. Introduction The development of Afghanistan is being guided by several documents. These include the Bonn Agreement, the Afghanistan Compact, the Afghanistan
National Development Strategy (ANDS) and the Afghanistan Millennium Development Goals plan. These are all lengthy documents developed in concert with the International Community through the services of the United Nations
Development Programme. The ANDS, for example, is comprised of three volumes, all of which have not yet been formally and officially adopted by the Afghan government, which is why
it is still referred as the Interim ANDS. Volume I discusses three Pillars for reform and development, which are comprised of eight sectors and there are five cross-cutting themes, meaning
they are to be addressed in all Sectors in all Pillars (Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, Volume I, 2006). Volume II of ANDS presents a summary of the
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