Started by the editors of Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies, this is a public forum for all those interested in Pakistani history, culture, and politics. We hope that our readers will use this forum to comment on our regular posts about the journal and about other Pakistan-related matters.

About Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies

Pakistaniaat is a refereed, multidisciplinary, and open access academic journal offering a forum for scholarly and creative engagement with various aspects of Pakistani history, culture, literature, and politics. Housed in the English Department of the University of North Texas, Pakistaniaat is a sponsored journal of the American Institute of Pakistan Studies. Available online as well as in print, Pakistaniaat publishes three issues per year. All sales of our Print Version support our online open access mission.

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ENGAGE WITH PAKISTAN AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY THIS SUMMER

November 27, 2011
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ENGAGE WITH PAKISTAN AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY THIS SUMMER

Statue of John Harvard, founder of Harvard Uni...

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This is the only ‘live’ U.S.-based video con course linking students

with Pakistani leaders and change-makers

Harvard Summer School registration opens in mid-January

Sign up for an email reminder at www.summer.harvard.edu

Traditional and non-traditional students are welcome

SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN PAKISTAN

South Asian Studies SAST S-140

June 25 to August 10, 2012

Prominent on everyone’s radar screen, Pakistan is a land of profound paradoxes. It is a nuclear nation whose development indicators are much lower than those of countries with similar income levels. It elected the Muslim world’s first woman head of state, but still suffers from extraordinary gender inequality. It offers a few youth unimaginable opportunities, yet confines many more to grinding poverty. It is home to Sufism, a religion of restraint, tolerance, and compassion, but plagued by horrific violence that seems to undermine and, at times, to derail development.

Pakistan’s most tragic paradox may well be the dominance of a development narrative that overstates instability and underestimates the ways in which participation, cooperation, and civil discourse shape the landscape. As evidence, although Pakistan recently suffered a natural disaster greater than two earthquakes and a tsunami combined, international aid appeals met mute indifference. In this course, we aim to counter monologues on terrorism, corruption, inefficiency, and hopelessness by sampling indigenous voices of persistence, enterprise, innovation, and criticism.

Pakistani experts, advocates, and change-makers will share their strategies for countering inequality and injustice in real-time video conferences. Through conversations with these guests, students will gain grounded insights on culturally appropriate and sustainable practices of poverty alleviation and, more broadly, on a dynamic human-centered development story. Three-hour modules will focus on education, health care, rural and urban development, microfinance and rehabilitation, media activism, politics and human rights, faith, and art as social critique.

The course format will emphasize active learning organized around core readings, informed presentations and discussions, reflective blogging, and individual or team projects.

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Masood Ashraf Raja

Author of Constructing Pakistan (Oxford, 2010), Masood Raja is an assistant professor of literature and the editor of Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies.

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