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August 30, 2021 | Was Canada's involvement in the war in Afghanistan a success? Despite the recent collapse of the Afghan government and the resurgence of the Taliban, Max Bell School professor Andrew Potter argues that Canada accomplished the narrow objectives it set back when troops were first deployed.

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Classified as: max bell school, max bell school of public policy, Afghanistan, Andrew Potter
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Published on: 31 Aug 2021

August 30, 2021 | In the wake of the disastrous pullout from Afghanistan, a group of foreign policy experts—including the Max Bell School's Jennifer Welsh—is calling for a rethink of Canada's role in global diplomacy.

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Classified as: max bell school, max bell school of public policy, Afghanistan, Jennifer Welsh
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Published on: 31 Aug 2021

Taliban insurgents entered Kabul after previously taking control of all of Afghanistan's other major cities apart from the capital. Prior talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government on a political understanding that could lead to a peace deal, backed by the United States and its allies, have failed to make significant progress. ()

Here is an expert from Ï㽶ÊÓƵ that can provide comment on this issue:

Classified as: McGill experts, Afghanistan, NATO, U.S. politics, international relations, Safia Amiry, Department of Integrated Studies in Education, Define the Line, sexual violence, gender based violence
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Published on: 19 Aug 2021

The Taliban's rapid takeover of Afghanistan has raised intense concern about the fate of the country's women and girls. In response, Max Bell School professor Vrindra Narain has proposed four tangible policy measures the international community must carry out.

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Classified as: max bell school, max bell school of public policy, Vrinda Narain, Afghanistan
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Published on: 19 Aug 2021

Most chemistry students are well aware of the anticancer properties of cisplatin, cis-Pt(NH3)2Cl2,  as a result of the pioneering work of Professor Barnett Rosenberg and his colleagues at the Michigan State University in the late 1960s. Over the years, this simple Pt(II) coordination complex and some structurally closely related ones have become the FDA-approved drugs of choice for cancer treatment, especially ovarian and testicular cancers.

Classified as: collaboration, Afghanistan, drug
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Published on: 23 Nov 2016
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