Comparison

Afghanistan vs Mexico

Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.

At a glance

Afghanistan

Since 2021, Afghan girls over 12 are banned from attending school.

The Taliban's return ended two decades of progress in girls' education, affecting 1.4 million secondary-school girls.

Mexico

In Mexico, children stay up for the family dinner at 9 PM โ€” because family time trumps early bedtimes.

Late dinners are the norm, not the exception โ€” children are woven into adult social life rather than separated from it.

How they compare
School systems
Gender-restricted crisis model

Afghanistan

Since the Taliban takeover in August 2021, girls above grade 6 are banned from school and women from universities. Boys' education continues but with revised curriculum emphasizing religious studies. Before 2021, enrollment had risen from near-zero for girls to 3.5 million.

Centralized public model

Mexico

A large public education system serving over 25 million students. The school day typically runs from 8 AM to 12:30 PM, though 'full-time schools' (escuelas de tiempo completo) extend to 3:30 PM. The SEP (Secretariat of Public Education) controls curriculum nationally.

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โ† Afghanistan profile ยท Mexico profile โ†’