William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
Abstract
This Article examines the turbulent constitutional history of Afghanistan and proposes a pragmatic constitutional framework balancing Islamic principles with rights, protections, and constraints on power. After analyzing the Taliban’s current extraconstitutional rule and ideological objections to an inclusive order, it makes the case for principled compromise. The first step to constitutional reform for Afghanistan is to recognize that Afghans, the Taliban, and the international community pay a high price for disregarding law and accountability in governance. To that end, this Article canvasses the many factors that could motivate the Taliban to accept the rule of law, despite the constraints it would impose on their authority.
This Article then proposes a constitutional framework that affirms Afghanistan’s Islamic foundations while integrating participatory mechanisms and institutional checks drawn from comparative global precedents. Core principles include safeguarding citizens’ basic rights, decentralizing some provincial authorities, upholding judicial independence, and enshrining equality protections for women and minorities. The goal is to balance religious values with accountable, stable governance.
This framework incorporates beneficial aspects of participatory Islamic models in nations like Iran, Malaysia, and Indonesia without outright adopting Western norms. It represents an incremental adaptation rooted in the country’s unique needs and constraints. The flexible provisions allow future enhancement of rights and accountability as conditions permit. While risks remain regarding implementation, this modest vision charts a realistic pathway from instability towards participatory constitutional order. Afghanistan’s diverse voices deserve recognition, and its citizens warrant basic protections, regardless of regime type. This imperfect but flexible and adaptable framework provides initial foundations to escape the vacuum of dictatorship and slowly build participatory consensus suited to local realities.