Modeling policy and agricultural decisions in Afghanistan

Afghanistan is responsible for the majority of the world’s supply of poppy crops, which are often used to produce illegal narcotics like heroin. This paper presents an agent-based model that simulates policy scenarios to characterize how the production of poppy can be dampened and replaced with licit crops over time. The model is initialized with spatial data, including transportation network and satellite-derived land use data. Parameters representing national subsidies, insurgent influence, and trafficking blockades are varied to represent different conditions that might encourage or discourage poppy agriculture. Our model shows that boundary-level interventions, such as targeted trafficking blockades at border locations, are critical in reducing the attractiveness of growing this illicit crop. The principle of least effort implies that interventions decrease to a minimal non-regressive point, leading to the prediction that increases in insurgency or other changes are likely to lead to worsening conditions, and improvements require substantial jumps in intervention resources.

[1]  Christopher Cramer,et al.  Try Again, Fail Again, Fail Better? War, the State, and the 'Post-Conflict' Challenge in Afghanistan , 2002 .

[2]  Gretchen Peters,et al.  Seeds of Terror: How Heroin is Bankrolling the Taliban and Al Qaeda , 2009 .

[3]  Michael Scott Doran,et al.  The Saudi Paradox , 2004 .

[4]  Jeffrey Clemens,et al.  Opium in Afghanistan: Prospects for the Success of Source Country Drug Control Policies , 2008, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[5]  George Kingsley Zipf,et al.  Human behavior and the principle of least effort , 1949 .

[6]  Jonathan Goodhand,et al.  Corrupting or Consolidating the Peace? The Drugs Economy and Post-conflict Peacebuilding in Afghanistan , 2008 .

[7]  Anicée Van Engeland « Frontiers and Wars: the Opium Economy in Afghanistan ». Journal of Agrarian Change, vol. 5, n° 42, 2005, pp. 191-216. , 2007 .

[8]  Christopher M. Blanchard Afghanistan: Narcotics and U.S. Policy , 2008 .

[9]  John F. Shroder,et al.  Afghanistan’s development and functionality: Renewing a collapsed state , 2007 .

[10]  Dorothy Kaucher Try it again , 1945 .

[11]  Anicée Van Engeland « Bullets, Ballots and Poppies in Afghanistan ». Journal of Democracy, vol. 16, n° 1, janvier 2005, pp. 24-38. , 2007 .

[12]  J. Goodhand,et al.  From holy war to opium war? A case study of the opium economy in North Eastern Afghanistan , 2000, Central Asian survey.

[13]  Robert Smith,et al.  The Meeting. , 1981, Journal of the Mississippi State Medical Association.

[14]  Crime,et al.  Afghanistan opium survey , 2013 .

[15]  J. Glaze,et al.  Opium and Afghanistan: Reassessing U.S. Counternarcotics Strategy , 2012 .

[16]  Thomas M Krummel Try again. Fail again. Fail better. , 2015, Journal of pediatric surgery.

[17]  Thomas Barfield,et al.  Bringing More Effective Governance to Afghanistan: 10 Pathways to Stability , 2010 .