Tajiks

Tajiks (Persian: تاجيک‎, Tājīk; Tajik: Тоҷик) are a Persian-speaking Iranian ethnic group native to Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Tajiks are the largest ethnicity in Tajikistan, and the second largest in Afghanistan which constitutes over half of the global Tajik population. They speak varieties of Persian, a Western Iranian language. In Tajikistan, since the 1939 Soviet census, its small Pamiri and Yaghnobi ethnic groups are included as Tajiks. In China, the term is used to refer to its Pamiri ethnic groups, the Tajiks of Xinjiang, who speak the Eastern Iranian Pamiri languages. In Afghanistan, the Pamiris are counted as a separate …

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Publications

LC: Library of Congress · 2020 English

"PIN: 206971-000"--Page 4 of cover. Shipping list no.: 2021-0047-P. Includes bibliographical references (page 87). Description based on online surrogate.

Balochistan Province. The next largest ethnic group, the Tajiks (27 percent), opposed the Taliban from their power


LC: Library of Congress · 2019 English

Includes bibliographical references. Title from PDF file as viewed on 08/20/2019.

– and explicitly against Tajiks. (r = -.44 with p <.01). Similarly Tajiks voted for the Tajik candidate This is particularly evident among Pashtuns and Tajiks. Pashtuns voted primarily for the two leading the Tajik candidate Abdullah (r = −0.71) – while Tajiks voted overwhelmingly for Abdullah (r = 0.80) between Abdullah Abdullah, being supported by Tajiks (r = 0.69) and Hazaras (r = 0.40) while experiencing correlation relative to the probability of support from Tajiks (r = -0.52) and Hazaras (r = -0.30). A significant


LC: Library of Congress · 2019 English

Includes bibliographical references. Title from PDF file as viewed on 08/20/2019.

exclusion from the state and overrepresentation of Tajiks and Hazaras in it. Similarly, they argue that to want a strong and Pushtun-run central state. Tajiks have focused on power sharing in the central state


LC: Library of Congress · 2019 English

Includes bibliographical references. Title from PDF file as viewed on 01/02/2020.

Uberoi, J.P.S. 1964. Social Organisation of the Tajiks of Andarab Valley, Afghanistan. PhD dissertation


LC: Library of Congress · 2018 English

Includes bibliographical references. Title from PDF file as viewed on 08/20/2019.

group identity. Historical, some group such as Tajiks does not associate themselves with the term ethnicity nationality, the Persian-speaking communities such as Tajiks and Hazaras had less awareness on the stated issues (See Table 6). Similarly, Uzbeks, Pashtuns, and Tajiks claimed high awareness (49.5%, 38.5% and 31.3% gender except for Tajiks. When controlled for education, it was found that Tajiks did not have a significant conditions for peace, compared to Uzbeks (25.9%), Tajiks (23.2%) and Hazaras (15.8%) (Table 10). The Taliban


LC: Library of Congress · 2018 English

"Project report" Includes bibliographical references. Title from PDF file as viewed on 08/20/2019.

customs within tribes. In Balkh, for instance Tajiks are considered to ask between 50,000 and 500,000


LC: Library of Congress · 2018 English

"Publication No: AISS-P-014-2018". Includes bibliographical references (page 51). Title from PDF file as viewed on 9/12/2018.

In this study, 99% of Pashtuns are Sunni, 79% Tajiks are Sunni and 21% of them are Shiite. For Hazaras positive attitude toward these policies among the Tajiks and Hazaras. Attitude Ethnicity Negative


LC: Library of Congress · 2017 English

Title from PDF file as viewed on 10/10/2017.

ethnicity, most of the members are Tajiks as the city is pre-dominantly Tajiks and to a lesser extent Pashtun


LC: Library of Congress · 2017 English

Title from PDF file as viewed on 09/11/2017.

majority of members are Pashtun (84%) followed by Tajiks (16%). As mentioned earlier, due to insecurity


LC: Library of Congress · 2017 English

Title from PDF file as viewed on 4/4/2018.

Presidential system while other ethnics including Tajiks, Uzbeks and Hazaras are scaring that a powerful


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