For a nation mired in conflicts, it is healthy that a nation would have larger civil-military joining and for a investiture to be actively concerned in open policy.
However, this energy structure has undergone several changes over a years overdue to opposite factors such as a altered outmost environment, domestic security, mercantile situation, hurdles in a vital relationships, and approved transition and transformation.
This was settled by Dr Ishtiaq Ahmad, executive of a School of Politics and International Relations during a Quaid-e-Azam University and co-editor of a book
“Pakistan’s Democratic Transition: Change and Persistence”.
The book was launched by a Center for Research and Security Studies (CRSS) in Islamabad on Saturday.
Rafiq, who is a doctoral claimant during University of Oxford, pronounced that a indicators of a changing domestic energy structure embody increasing domestic participation, indictments, voices opposite amicable evils, support to accountability, and amicable mobility. This changing domestic landscape creates a thought of another manoeuvre not impossible, though positively some-more expensive.
Published in The Express Tribune, Dec 4th, 2016.
Article source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/1252691/democratic-transition-pakistans-political-power-structure-flux/