Fr. 69.00

Genesis of Baloch Nationalism - Politics and Ethnicity in Pakistan, 19471977

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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List of contents

Acknowledgements 1. The case of Balochistan: a self-fulfilling prophecy 2. Ideological interventions 3. Political interventions 4. Military interventions 5. Epilogue: reflections on the changing dimensions of the Baloch national movement since 1977 Appendices. Index.

About the author

Salman Rafi Sheikh, previously a research scholar at the National Institute of Pakistan Studies, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan, is by training a political scientist, specializing in political history with focus on ethno-nationalism, identity politics and post-colonialism. He writes on Pakistan’s various socio-political issues, foreign policies of major powers towards regional issues, including Balochistan, their application and consequences, and his op-eds and insights regularly appear in highly acclaimed international and regional media such as Asia Times.

Summary

This book explores the ideological, political and military interventions of the state of Pakistan in Balochistan, and traces the genesis of today’s secessionist movement. Drawing on hitherto unexplored sources, this book will be indispensable to scholars and researchers of South Asian history, politics, international relations and area studies.

Additional text

'Salman Rafi has written a book that should make all of us pause and contemplate the complex realities of political conflict in the contemporary world. In meticulously documenting the evolution of the political struggle of the Baloch ethnic-nation for rights and recognition within the state of Pakistan, Rafi forces us to think critically about the problematic of political violence in the so-called age of terror, and alerts us to the dangers of using an ahistorical lens to study conflicts between states and ethnic communities that reside within state borders. Rafi demonstrates that the growing visibility of often violent separatist elements within the wider Baloch nationalist movement raises questions about how successive Pakistani rulers have dealt with long-standing demands emanating from peripheral regions over questions of identity and power-sharing within a multi-national state. Rather than embodying a fundamentally anti-democratic and violent ethos, the Baloch movement is, in Rafi's close reading, to be seen as a case of a people being forced into an untenable position by a state that continues to view democratic assertion by historically underrepresented ethnic groups as an invitation to suppress them. Needless to say, such an approachby the stateis entirely self-defeating, but, worryingly, more and more the norm in an age where any and all forms of dissent are conveniently reduced to "terrorism".' - Aasim Sajjad Akhtar, National Institute of Pakistan Studies, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan

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