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PAKISTAN: POLITICAL & CONSTITUTIONAL ENGINEERING
A chronicle of Pakistan’s political history that offers concise accounts of the major political events and constitutional issues, the making and the breaking of interim and regular constitutions going back to the establishment of Pakistan in August 1947. The book focuses on Pakistan’s challenges of state building and nation building, and the search for a viable participatory political order. It examines political and constitutional engineering by civilian and military-bureaucratic governments to serve their partisan interests, and Pakistan’s conflictual politics devoid of the democratic culture and civility. The book also offers insights into the changing patterns of civil-military relations, ascendancy of the military to political power, civilianization of military rule through power-sharing, and the shift from military “rule” to “role”. It also examines the internal and external dimensions of the East Pakistan/Bangladesh crisis, national and provincial elections, protest movements including the lawyers movement and the Caretaker governance system in Pakistan.
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THE PAKISTANI HISTORIAN
In the preface, Aziz recalls numerous instances of his humiliation in front of his colleagues and students. Whenever asked, he could never produce resources on Pakistan s history from Pakistani historians. The book is an analysis of why this was so, why the historian profession failed. To quote Aziz himself, If 5 or 6 historians write and publish in a country of 120 million people, there is something wrong with the historians and with the people.
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