Essay Topic Hub

Pakistan
Essays

897+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

897 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Pakistan occupies a central place in political science, international relations, history, and regional studies courses. As a nuclear-armed state situated at the intersection of South Asia, Central Asia, and the Middle East, it presents students with questions about governance, state power, religious identity, and regional conflict. The country's relationship with neighboring India, its role in Afghan affairs, and the tension between Islam and democratic institutions give it a complexity that instructors across multiple disciplines find academically productive to assign.

Papers on this topic approach Pakistan from several distinct angles. Security-focused essays examine military intervention, the role of agencies like the ISI, and comparisons between U.S. involvement in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Historical treatments address foundational conflicts such as the First Kashmir War of 1947–1948 and the broader Indo-Pakistani dispute over Kashmir. Other papers take up ideological questions, particularly whether Islamic governance and democracy can coexist within Pakistan's political system. Some essays shift toward economic and social dimensions, exploring topics like career orientation among bank managers in the public and private sectors.

A strong essay on Pakistan benefits from a clearly bounded thesis — choosing one dimension, such as civil-military relations, regional security, or political Islam, rather than attempting to cover the country broadly. Evidence drawn from specific policy decisions, historical events, and documented government actions tends to carry more weight than general characterizations. The most common pitfall is treating Pakistan purely as a backdrop to other subjects, such as U.S. foreign policy or Afghan conflict, without engaging substantively with Pakistan's own internal dynamics and political history.

897 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Business Economics Vincent There Is a Process
There is a process by which there is both a decrease in the number of jobs that is increasing, and this is coupled with a global transfer of jobs to less developed countries. Both of these have an impact in the decrease…
Research Paper Doctorate
Weapons proliferation: causes, consequences, and international control
Weapons Proliferation, simply defined, is the rapid increase or spread of weapons in the context of global security. If we are to measure the weapons capabilities of the world, the United States retains the lion's…
Research Paper Doctorate
Democracy concepts and historical development
Terrorism is by its very nature is anti-democratic as it seeks to achieve political ends by violence. It has no interest in any of the bedrocks of democracy such as building consensus, stimulating debate or protecting…
Research Paper Doctorate
Repression of Women in Islam as One
As one of the world's most prominent and dominant religion, Islam influences numerous nations in the world, affecting their culture and society. Examples of these Muslim nations are the dominantly Muslim societies of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Terrorism and homeland security overview
The paper explores peer reviewed articles in order to compare and contrast terrorist organizations in both Europe and Middle East. It provides a brief history of the terrorist groups, the description of the group as well as the financial sources of the groups. It identifies recent activities of the groups and U.S interventions.
Paper Undergraduate
Peepli Live and Earth
Indian partition and Indian democracy today: Two films' perspective
Paper Undergraduate
Politics of the Common Good in Justice:
In Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do? (2009), Michael J. Sandal argues that politics and society require a common moral purpose beyond the assertion of natural rights like life liberty and property or the utilitarian calculus of increasing pleasure and minimizing pain for the greatest number of people. He would move beyond both John Locke and Jeremy Bentham in asserting that "a just society can't be achieved simply by maximizing utility or by securing freedom of choice" (Sandal 261). Justice and morality involve making judgments on a wide variety of issues, including inequality of wealth and incomes, discrimination against women and minorities, CEP pay, government bailouts of banks and public education. Politics should take "moral and spiritual questions seriously" and not only on issues like sexual orientation and abortion, but also "broad economic and civil concerns" (Sandal 262). Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King added this moral dimension to U.S. politics in the 1960s when they criticized the Vietnam War, poverty and racial inequality and "appealed to a sense of community" (Sandal 263).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Religious Violence and Non-Violence
As the truth is relative and it changes constantly based on one's own experiences and in some cases on revelations, and since the world, although based on eternal values, is constantly changing, the story of Gandhi's…
Research Paper Doctorate
Kung San Trial Marriages and U.S. Divorce
The!Kung San are a hunter-gatherer people that inhabit the Kalahari desert in Africa. They are the Bushmen who have managed to live a contented, self-governed life while the rest of the world has sprung up around them…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Three Theoretical Approaches in Study of Geopolitics
¶ … geopolitics in today's world. Specifically it will discuss three theoretical approaches to geopolitics the class has studied. The three approaches are Makinder's approach to geopolitics in Eurasia and the "pivot…