Pakistan : a new history Ian Talbot.
Material type:
- 023170318X (hardcover)
- 9780231703185 (hardcover)
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Air University Central Library Islamabad | NFIC | 954.91 TAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out | 06/05/2025 | P9950 |
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954.91 SID The pashtun question | 954.91 SIN Jinnah | 954.91 SUL Meatless days | 954.91 TAL Pakistan : a new history | 954.91 TAL Pakistan : a modern history | 954.9104 STA State and nation-building in Pakistan : beyond Islam and security | 954.9105 BHU The shadow of the crescent moon |
If Pakistan is to preserve all that is good about its country -- the generosity and hospitality of its people, the dynamism of its youth -- it must face the deterioration of its social and political institutions. Sidestepping easy headlines to identify Pakistan's true dangers, this volume revisits the major turning points and trends of Pakistani history over the past six decades, focusing on the increasing entrenchment of Pakistan's army in its political and economic arenas; the complex role of Islam in public life; the tensions between central and local identities and democratic impulses; and the affect of geopolitical influences on domestic policy and development. While Ian Talbot's study centers on Pakistan's many failures -- the collapse of stable governance, the drop in positive political and economic development, and, most of all, the unrealized goal of securing a separate Muslim state -- his text unequivocally affirms Pakistan's potential for a positive reawakening. These failures were not preordained, Talbot agues, and such a fatalistic reading does not respect the complexity of historical events, individual actors, and the state's own rich resources. Talbot's sensitive historical approach makes it clear that favorable opportunities still remain for Pakistan, in which the state has a chance to reclaim its priorities and institutions and reestablish political and economic sustainability.
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