Pakistan’s Constitution provides for the protection of minorities but in reality discriminatory legislation, social prejudice and sectarian violence leave them vulnerable. In this article, Adam Weinstein and Zahra Dsouza discuss the threat that Deobandi-inspired extremists pose to tolerance in Pakistan, and write that the government cannot turn a blind eye to the treatment of minorities as this will only embolden perpetrators and result in wider and more indiscriminate attacks on society
Pakistan’s fight against extremism is not a success story, as extremism seems to be on rise le...
<p><em>Shiā‘ah-Sunnī violence has assumed alarming proportion in Pakistan during the recent years. W...
This article analyzes how the law against blasphemy has become a weapon against religious minorities...
Contemporary Pakistan has been passing through the worst phase of its history due to internal law an...
Since the creation of Pakistan in 1947, religious minorities in the country have faced systematic ma...
Are we Muslims and equal citizens of Pakistan? That is what Pakistani Shia identity has come down to...
The role of religion in Pakistani political and civil life has had a defining role in the political ...
The United Nations (“UN”) adopted the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (“ICCPR”)...
This article focusses on the Christian minority in Pakistan, and postulates that their “crisis condi...
The United Nations (“UN”) adopted the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (“ICCPR”)...
The world sectarianism is derived from “sect”, which means the body of people having varied views wi...
Pakistan is an immensely plural country characterized by religious, sectarian and ethno-linguistic d...
Shia account for approximately 10–15 per cent of the Muslim population in Pakistan, which has a lar...
Pakistan is plural country where equal citizenship based on unfettered human rights could lead to ma...
Sufism, secularism, pluralism, and religious tolerance are few for the unique features Sindh had alw...
Pakistan’s fight against extremism is not a success story, as extremism seems to be on rise le...
<p><em>Shiā‘ah-Sunnī violence has assumed alarming proportion in Pakistan during the recent years. W...
This article analyzes how the law against blasphemy has become a weapon against religious minorities...
Contemporary Pakistan has been passing through the worst phase of its history due to internal law an...
Since the creation of Pakistan in 1947, religious minorities in the country have faced systematic ma...
Are we Muslims and equal citizens of Pakistan? That is what Pakistani Shia identity has come down to...
The role of religion in Pakistani political and civil life has had a defining role in the political ...
The United Nations (“UN”) adopted the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (“ICCPR”)...
This article focusses on the Christian minority in Pakistan, and postulates that their “crisis condi...
The United Nations (“UN”) adopted the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (“ICCPR”)...
The world sectarianism is derived from “sect”, which means the body of people having varied views wi...
Pakistan is an immensely plural country characterized by religious, sectarian and ethno-linguistic d...
Shia account for approximately 10–15 per cent of the Muslim population in Pakistan, which has a lar...
Pakistan is plural country where equal citizenship based on unfettered human rights could lead to ma...
Sufism, secularism, pluralism, and religious tolerance are few for the unique features Sindh had alw...
Pakistan’s fight against extremism is not a success story, as extremism seems to be on rise le...
<p><em>Shiā‘ah-Sunnī violence has assumed alarming proportion in Pakistan during the recent years. W...
This article analyzes how the law against blasphemy has become a weapon against religious minorities...