04539nam 22006735 450 991059007810332120251202151420.09789811917943(electronic bk.)978981191793610.1007/978-981-19-1794-3(MiAaPQ)EBC7077165(Au-PeEL)EBL7077165(CKB)24739011600041(DE-He213)978-981-19-1794-3(EXLCZ)992473901160004120220823d2022 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMainstreaming the Tribal Areas (ex-FATA) of Pakistan Bordering Afghanistan Challenges and Prospects /by Asghar Khan1st ed. 2022.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2022.1 online resource (402 pages)Print version: Khan, Asghar Mainstreaming the Tribal Areas (ex-FATA) of Pakistan Bordering Afghanistan Singapore : Palgrave Macmillan US,c2022 9789811917936 Includes bibliographical references and index.Chapter 1: State Governance in the Ungoverned Territories of Developing States: The Conceptual Framework -- Chapter 2: Geography, Socio-economic and Political set up of FATA: An Overview -- Chapter 3: Challenges to State Governance in FATA: Society-centred Approach -- Chapter 4: Challenges to State Governance in FATA: ‘State-in-Society’ Approach -- Chapter 5: Challenges to State Governance in FATA: State-centred Approach -- Chapter 6: Extension of State Governance (Authority) in FATA: Prospects -- Chapter 7: Conclusion -- Index.'Dr. Asghar Khan has written a conceptually sophisticated and empirically rich study of one of the most understudied, yet important regions of Pakistan – the FATA. Combining years of fieldwork with a robust political science framework, Dr. Khan offers new insights which challenge many of the dated and harmful assumptions about this place and its people. This volume is sure to become a must read for anyone interested in this ‘ungovernable’ space.' —Benjamin D. Hopkins, Professor of History, Elliott School of International Affairs, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA The book addresses why the Pakistani state is facing persistent challenges in extending and consolidating its governance (authority) throughout its territories, especially in the former Federally Administered Tribal Areas (ex-FATA)? Even after the de jure merger, the question still remains valid that how Pakistani state could establish its governance in these tribal areas? Through multi-dimensional approaches and multi-pronged analysis of state-centric (top-down), society-centric (bottom-up) and state-in-society (mixed-horizontal) approaches, the book explains factors and dimensions that pose challenges to Pakistani state governance in ex-FATA. The main hypothesis is that societies, where state governance is absent, turn to informal governance and create informal institutions as a substitute for the weak central state governance thereby challenging the domination and control/authority of the state. The book presents policy recommendations for bringing these tribal areas into the mainstream governance system of Pakistan. Asghar Khan is the head of the Department of Regional Studies, University of Peshawar, and teaches Political Science there.AsiaPolitics and governmentPolitical scienceRegionalismTerrorismPolitical violenceEconomic developmentAsian PoliticsGovernance and GovernmentRegionalismTerrorism and Political ViolenceDevelopment StudiesAsiaPolitics and government.Political science.Regionalism.Terrorism.Political violence.Economic development.Asian Politics.Governance and Government.Regionalism.Terrorism and Political Violence.Development Studies.330.9417Khan Asghar1254299MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910590078103321Mainstreaming the Tribal Areas (ex-FATA) of Pakistan Bordering Afghanistan2908319UNINA