The American Institute
of Pakistan Studies brings Pakistani scholars to US to visit
its various member institutions
and to participate in seminars, conferences and deliver lectures
to American students and researchers on Pakistan and fields
associated with Pakistan Studies. Below is brief information
on the recently held lectures.
Akbar Zaidi - April 10th - "The Future of Democracy
in Pakistan"
Often called a failed state, overwhelmingly
Muslim, ruled for the most part by the military, a country
with nuclear
weapons, actively involved in the war on terrorism,
Pakistan is a site which offers complex, complicated and conflicting
scope and possibility, both as theory and as example,
of how numerous factors determine political and economic
futures.
The recent impartial and free elections, a rare occurrence,
offer yet new possibilities, building on its history
and
structural and institutional determinants. This lecture
examined the possibilities that emerge from these
elections and what they mean for Pakistan, South Asia and
the US. S. Akbar Zaidi is a Karachi-based political economist
who
has written a number of books on Pakistan and on its place
in South Asia.
Hassan Askari-Rizvi,
Johns Hopkins, School of Advanced International Studies - An Overview of Political
Transformations Today presented at the conference Political Transformations
in Pakistan held
in Washington DC, March 29, 2008.
This talk addressed the history-making socio-political
transformations that Pakistan has undergone during 2007-2008
which has tilted the political balance in favor of civilian
political forces and societal groups. This transformation
has to be viewed as a turning point in the on-going struggle
between authoritarian governance and democratic aspirations.
Many factors contributed to this transformation but the current
change is yet to be institutionalized; there may be more
confrontation in the future. The possibility of stagnation
or reversal of the change cannot be ruled out, although the
forces of authoritarianism will face more challenges than
was the case in the past. Civilian and political forces have
gained confidence in their capacity to effect changes in
the political system by collective action which amounted
to breaking-out of the state of helplessness created by the
long years of military domination of political and societal
processes and its expanded role in the economy. The following
major factors contributed to this change: the suspension
of the chief Justice on March 9, 2007 and the movement by
lawyers and civil society groups for his restoration, the
red mosque incident, the controversy on Musharraf's re-election,
the return of Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, the election
campaign and assassination of Benazir Bhutto, reaction of
the politically active circles and political parties against
Pervez Musharraf's decision to suspend the constitution,
and remove the judges and institute constitutional amendments
to secure his presidency. These developments led to the electoral
setback for the pro-Musharraf political leaders in the general
elections in February 2008.. The election results have provided
the political leaders and civil society groups with an opportunity
to retrieve the initiative from the military-bureaucratic
elite. Now they will have to establish stable and efficacious
government to address the problems afflicting the Pakistani
society.
Bushra Aitzaz,
Lahore, Pakistan, The Judiciary and Political Transformations
in Pakistan presented at the conference Political Transformations
in
Pakistan held in Washington DC, March 29, 2008.
The judiciary had been a focal point of action taken by
the Government of Pakistan this past year. The lawyers movement,
led by Aitzaz Ahsan, has played a powerful role in pushing
the states adherence to the Constitution and rule of law
as well as mobilizing people in support of restoration of
the judiciary following the imposition of the Emergency on
November 3, 2007. This talk reviewed the role played by
the judiciary and the lawyers movement with a focus in particular
of events of the past year in affecting political transformation
and analyzes the potential role each may play in the new
political setup in Pakistan.
Aasiya Riaz,
Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency,
Pakistani Media and Political Transformation presented at
the conference Political Transformations in Pakistan held
in Washington DC, March 29, 2008.
The February 18 General Election tells a spectacular tale
of the road to political maturity in Pakistan. The independent
news media in Pakistan is considered a veritable source in
changing political fortunes in Pakistan. But has the independent
media been a cause or a catalyst in this political transformation?
Touching briefly on the media effects theory, especially
medias effect on democratisation, the paper argues that the
media played the role of an amplifier in a society that stood
poised on the issue of Rule of Law following the March 09,
2007 attempt by Gen. Musharraf to dismiss the Chief Justice
of Pakistan. Not only March 9 catalysed a political movement
that came to symbolise the decades-long struggle for constitutionalism
and created an unlikely hero in the Chief Justice of Pakistan,
the polarized Pakistani society witnessed a change: regardless
of politically partisan considerations, people began to emphasise
principles over prudence. The paper outlines the crucial
role played by the media in bringing the issue out in the
open and keeping it alive while discussing the challenges
it has been facing in carrying out this mandate. In this
struggle, individual dissidents (TV anchors and analysts)
became cult figures as media houses (owners) became vulnerable
to state intervention. These individual dissidents improvised
ways to reach out to public and played a crucial role in
sustaining the struggle. Alongside this muzzling by the government,
the influence of the media on political transformation increased
with number and quality of ties existing between the media
and the civil society