- After Study Hours: Exploring the Madrassah Mindset
- Education for peace and harmony
- Reconstruction of the National narratives and Counter-Violent Extremism Model for Pakistan
- Role of Post-Noon Engagements of Madrassa Students in Radical Orientation
- Promoting Inclusive and Tolerant Educational Narratives
- Islam, Democracy and the Constitution of Pakistan
- Minority Rights in Pakistan: Historic Neglect or State Complicity?
- “Creating an environment that counteracts militant ideologies and radicalism in Pakistan”
- Through Each Other’s Eyes
- The Role of Ulema in Promotion of Peace and Harmony in Society
- Critical Ideologies: A Debate on Takfeer & Khurooj
- سماجی ہم آہنگی ، رواداری اور تعلیم
- سماجی ہم آہنگی کیسے ہو؟
- اسلام جمہوریت اور آئین پاکستان
- پر امن اور متوازن معاشرے کے قیام میں علماء کا کردار
- اسلام جمہوریت اور پاکستان
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- مسئلہ تکفیر و خروج
- Media Safety in Pakistan
- تعلیم امن اور ہم آہنگی
- Regulating Broadcast Media: Challenges & Reforms
- Pakistan’s Sectarian Mire & The Way Forward
- Dialogue Pakistan 2019 report
- Pakistan’s achievements in war on terror but at what cost: a special review of the current decade
- Pakistan in changing world order
- Who Am I
- Academic and Intellectual Dialogue on Social Harmony, Tolerance and Education
- Youth Engagement in Pakistan: Baseline Evaluation and Way Forward
- Dialogue Pakistan 2020
- Strengthening Governance in Pakistan
- Youth Perspective on Society, Religion, And Politics
- Supporting the Afghan peace process: Pakistan’s position, interests and policy options
- Afghanistan as Seen from Pakistan I
- Afghanistan as Seen from Pakistan II
- Perspectives from Pakistan on Afghan peace and reconciliation 1
- Discourse with Balochistan Youth on Society, Religion, and Politics
- Perspectives From Pakistan on Afghan Peace and Reconciliation 2
- How Youth in Sindh View State, Religion and Politics
- Afghan Peace and Reconciliation: Pakistan’s Interests and Policy Options II
- Interfaith Relations in Pakistan Perspectives and Worldview of Youth in Punjab
- Pakistan’s CounterExtremism Challenge and Policy Recourse
- Afghanistan as Seen from Pakistan III
- Making Sense of Pakistani Youth How Youth in Pakistan View State, Society, Religion, and Politics
- PERSPECTIVES FROM PAKISTAN ON AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION 3
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN'S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS 3
- A Path to Peace
- Countering Violent Extremism on Campuses A Faculty-Oriented Policy Brief
- PERSPECTIVES FROM PAKISTAN ON AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION 4
- Afghanistan as Seen from Pakistan IV
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN’S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS 4
- POLICY BRIEF APRIL-JUNE, 2022
- Afghanistan as Seen from Pakistan V
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN’S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS 5
- PERSPECTIVES FROM PAKISTAN ON AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION 5
- Charter of Peace
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN'S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS VI
- AFGHANISTAN AS SEEN FROM PAKISTAN-VI
- PERSPECTIVES FROM PAKISTAN ON AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION 6
- POLICY BRIEF 2
- POLICY BRIEF October December, 2022
- Youth for interfaith harmony Newsletter 1
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN’S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS
- PERSPECTIVES FROM PAKISTAN ON AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION 7
- AFGHANISTAN AS SEEN FROM PAKISTAN-VII
- YOUTH AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT IN PAKISTAN
- Pakistan’s Afghan perspective and policy options
- POLICY BRIEF January-March, 2023
- Charter of Peace
- PERSPECTIVES FROM PAKISTAN ON AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION 8
- AFGHANISTAN AS SEEN FROM PAKISTAN-VIII
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN'S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS 8
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN’S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS 9
- Policy Brief April- May 2023
- POLICY BRIEF Jun- Aug 2023
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN'S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS - 11
- Pakistan's Evolving Militant Landscape: State Responses and Policy options
- AFGHAN PEACE AND RECONCILIATION: PAKISTAN’S INTERESTS AND POLICY OPTIONS – 12
- TRENDLINES OF PAKISTAN'S SECURITY CHALLENGES
Pakistan can benefit from the changing world order, once it puts its own house in order. At the same time, it needs to rid of the binary thinking that being one’s ally means being someone else’s enemy.
These views were expressed in the daylong seminar on “Pakistan in Changing World”, held on January 21, 2019 in Islamabad. International and national experts spoke on the occasion.
The seminar noted that the world is changing: US’s global posture, if not power, is changing; China is rising; the Middle East is in throes of violence fueled by regional rivalries; terrorism still is a potent threat. All these and many other developments are affecting Pakistan.
As discussed, China’s rise and what it means for US is over speculated . Will there be cooperation or outright conflict, or something in between? While some are not ready to lend cooperation on global issues, the current administration in the US, it is said views China as more of a strategic rival.
In Pakistan, there is a tendency of viewing US-China competition as inevitable. Even Pakistan’s own diplomatic struggles or India’s closeness with US, is traced to the latter’s outdoing China. But one strong view warns against falling too much for a Cold-War binary thinking.
Yet, Pakistan’s alignment with China, manifested in the shape of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), is credited for opening diplomatic and economic space for Pakistan beyond its existing options. At the same time, Pakistan should not let go of its ties with the US. Those ties have their own history and should not even be linked to US’s relations with India.
Regionally, the rivalry between Middle Eastern countries, in particular, Iran and Saudi Arabia, can limit Pakistan’s choices, forcing it to choose one over another. How Pakistan manages that is yet to be seen. Pakistan’s key concern, it was noted, is the potential export of terrorist ideologies by groups like Daish, which presents an ideology calling for establishing an Islamic State.
On a positive note, many terrorist groups in the country are on the run. This, some say, can provide space for Pakistan to move ahead.
While Pakistan can do little in changing the world around, it can mitigate its negative effects with foresight, by taking benefit from competing players.
Pakistan’s inability to play to the fullest emanates from the economic difficulties it faces, coupled with a sense of insecurity dodging it for the last ten years.
As the world becomes multipolar, so would the discourse be, with reference to power politics dominating it at the behest of human rights. Yet connectivity too seems to be the way forward, which China has been propounding.