- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-8, No-1, 2016
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-10, No-2, 2018
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-7, No-2, Jul-Dec 2015
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-7, No-1, Jan-Jun 2015
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-6, No-1, Jan-Jun 2014
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-4, No-3, Jul-Sep 2011
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-4, No-2, Apr-Jun 2011
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-4, No-1, Jan-Mar 2011
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-2, No-3, Jul-Sep 2009
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-2, No-2, Apr-Jun 2009
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-2, No-1, Jan-Mar 2009
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-1, No-1, 2008
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-5, No-1, Jan-Jun 2013
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-6, No-2, July-Dec 2014
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-3, No-4, Oct-Dec 2010
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-3, No-3, July-Sep 2010
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-3, No-2, Apr-Jun 2010
- Conflict and Peace Studies, Vol-3, No-1, Jan-Mar 2010
Editor: Muhammad Amir Rana
Associate Editors: Najam U Din, Safdar Sial, Shakil Chaudhary
Pakistan faces an assortment of conflicts including militancy and terrorism,
expanding sectarian strife and violence, a nationalist insurgency in
Balochistan, ethno-political violence particularly in Karachi, political turmoil
in governance, and inter-state conflicts with its neighbors. There are
considerable gaps in context-specific understanding and empirical evidence
base of these and related issues in academic and policy-level research and
analysis. This not only confuses the entire discourse on conflict de-escalation
and peacebuilding but also questions the context and relevance of the policies
and interventions implemented regarding that on the level of state and
society.
Pak Institute for Peace Studies (PIPS) has been striving to fill this gap by
carrying out empirical, grounded-in-field research on the cited issues and by
disseminating its research findings and based on it policy recommendations
through this quarterly research journal. Started in the last quarter of 2008, as
many as 14 issues of the PIPS research journal have been published so far
with their primary focus on conflict, insecurity, militancy and militants’
media, religious extremism, radicalization & de-radicalizatio
CONTENTS
Comment
A review of National Internal Security Policy (2013-18)
Muhammad Amir Rana
Papers
2014 withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan: implications for regional security
Safdar Sial & Talha Saeed Satti
Post-2014 Afghanistan: prospects for Taliban's rise to power
Farhan Zahid
FATA reforms: journey so far and the way forward
Asmatullah Khan Wazir
Militant economy of Karachi
Zia Ur Rehman
Islam and politics in Pakistan (1906-1985): a political perspective
Arsalan Bilal
Sectarian ideological warfare through graffiti
Muhammad Asif
Regional view
Pak-Afghan ties: views of Pakistan's political and religious parties
Musa Javaid and Sara Meer
Backgrounder
Evolution of militant groups in Pakistan (4)
Muhammad Amir Rana