The Asia Foundation Releases 2007 Afghan Public Opinion Poll



    Today, The Asia Foundation released findings from its most recent
    public opinion poll in Afghanistan, which covers the largest
    population sample ever surveyed at one time in all 34 of Afghanistan's
    provinces. "Afghanistan in 2007: A Survey of the Afghan People"
    follows polls conducted by the Foundation in 2004 and 2006.
    Collectively, the three surveys establish an accurate and long-term
    barometer of public opinion across Afghanistan to help assess the
    direction in which the country is moving in the post-Taliban era.

    A copy of the 2007 survey can be accessed in its entirety at
    www.asiafoundation.org.

    The 2007 survey captures the Afghan public's perceptions of
    reconstruction, security, governance, and poppy cultivation -- as well
    as attitudes towards government and informal institutions, the role of
    women and Islam in society, and the impact of media. The fieldwork for
    the survey was conducted in June 2007, and consists of a random sample
    of 6,263 in-person interviews with Afghan men and women 18 years of
    age and above, from different social, economic, and ethnic communities
    in rural and urban areas in all 34 provinces of Afghanistan.

    The survey report opens with findings on the overall national mood
    in Afghanistan in 2007, which states that 42 percent of Afghans think
    the country is headed in the right direction (compared to 44% in 2006,
    and 64% in 2004); 24 percent feel it is moving in the wrong direction
    (21% in 2006, 11% in 2004), and 25 percent have mixed feelings (29% in
    2006, 8% in 2004).

    The 2007 survey -- which was funded through The Asia Foundation's
    ongoing cooperative agreement with the U.S. Agency for International
    Development -- was designed, directed, and edited by the
    Foundation, with all in-person interviews completed by 494 Afghan men
    and women employed by the Afghan Center for Socio-economic and Opinion
    Research (ACSOR) in Kabul. Similar surveys will be conducted in 2008,
    2009, and 2010.

    ABOUT THE ASIA FOUNDATION IN AFGHANISTAN

    The Asia Foundation's Kabul office was re-established in February
    2002 to launch programs in areas vital to the political, social,
    economic, and intellectual development of post-Taliban Afghanistan.
    Since 2002, the Foundation's Kabul office has assisted Afghans in
    their efforts to rebuild the country through the establishment of an
    interim government, the development of a new constitution, and the
    provision of support to implement national voter registration, civic
    education, media monitoring, and technical planning for the 2004
    Presidential and 2005 National Assembly and Provincial Council
    elections. Since these elections, the Foundation has been providing
    long-term critical support to key institutions within the executive
    branch of government at the central level. Other Foundation programs
    have focused on creating educational and training opportunities for
    women and girls, supporting development of higher education, and
    promoting exchanges to foster improved international relations.

    ABOUT THE ASIA FOUNDATION

    The Asia Foundation is a non-profit, non-governmental organization
    committed to the development of a peaceful, prosperous, just, and open
    Asia-Pacific region. The Foundation supports programs in Asia that
    help improve governance, law, and civil society; women's empowerment;
    economic reform and development; and international relations. Drawing
    on 50 years of experience in Asia, the Foundation collaborates with
    private and public partners to support leadership and institutional
    development, exchanges, and policy research.

    With a network of 17 offices throughout Asia, an office in
    Washington, D.C., and its headquarters in San Francisco, the
    Foundation addresses these issues on both a country and regional
    level. In 2006, the Foundation provided more than $53 million in
    program support and distributed 920,000 books and educational
    materials valued at $30 million throughout Asia.

    For more information, please visit http://www.asiafoundation.org.