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ID148023
Title ProperJinnah on governance
Other Title Informationthe unheeded advice of Pakistan’s quaid-i-azam
LanguageENG
AuthorNiaz, Ilhan
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper examines the views of Pakistan's founder, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, on a range of issues including sovereignty, civil-military relations, the civil service, industrialization, religion and the state, and national integration. Relying on Jinnah's own views, it reveals that selective engagement with what Jinnah thought has done no favours to Pakistan. Indeed, Pakistan has for all practical purposes, rejected nearly every policy prescription that its founder believed in and effectively repudiated what Jinnah stood for. While much attention has been paid to Jinnah's role in the partition of India or in the politics of the Indian Freedom Movement and the Pakistan Movement, comparatively little has been written about Jinnah's views on governance. This paper tries to initiate the process of filling this gap in the hope of generating a more holistic debate about what Pakistan's founder stood for as a statesman and state builder.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Affairs Vol. 47, No.3; Nov 2016: p.406-427
Journal SourceAsian Affairs Vol: 47 No 3
Key WordsSovereignty ;  Partition ;  Secularism ;  Pakistan ;  Civil Service ;  Industry ;  Constitution ;  Constituent Assembly ;  Centralisation ;  Jinna


 
 
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