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Modern View
PAKISTA
(2)
answer(s).
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Item
1
ID:
089761
Capturing Karachi
/ Ghori, Imran
Ghori, Imran
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2009.
Summary/Abstract
Like nationalist political parties the world over, those in Karachi have come to understand the power that can come from a fear-based agenda. Their bogey: Talibanisation
Key Words
Taliban
;
Talibanisation
;
Pakista
;
Anti-Taliban Campaign
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2
ID:
187420
Politics of Pakistan’s COVID-19 Response: a State-in-Society Approach
/ Qureshi, Ayaz
Qureshi, Ayaz
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This paper takes a “state-in society” approach to understanding the evolution of Pakistan’s COVID-19 response, which was laid claim to and contested by multiple agencies within and adjacent to the state, and by multiple levels of government. The capacity of the health system of Pakistan was already overstretched by the needs of its population but in recent years it has been hamstrung by ongoing protests by the medical community concerning the privatization of public-sector hospitals, to which were added protests over the lack of personal protective equipment in the public sector. These protests resulted in frequent closures of outpatient departments at major hospitals. When the government announced a relief package to mitigate the effects of COVID-19, traders and big businesses lobbied the government to obtain the lion’s share in the form of concessions such as loan deferments and tax refunds. The government touted the unconditional cash grants program but the cash for the poor could not be disbursed effectively due to the absence of local governments at the grassroots level. As an appropriate response to the pandemic, especially in relation to the lockdown policies, was contested and negotiated among multiple actors in the Pakistani state and society, the Pakistani military emerged as a dominant force in this “field of power.”1 In this paper, I present an account of Pakistan’s response to COVID-19 as it evolved in 2020 and discuss the implications for democratic culture in Pakistan.
Key Words
Health
;
Pakista
;
Pakistan Military
;
Pandemic Politics
;
COVID-19
;
State-In-Society
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