All posts by Zubeida Mustafa

How the laws treat the second half

By Zubeida Mustafa

The role of legislation in the emancipation and empowerment of women has been the subject of much debate in discourses on women’s rights. Can laws reform the status of women when society is not prepared to introduce changes? In other words can transformation in the condition of women in a society be brought about through law making rather than the social process? Continue reading How the laws treat the second half

Beginning with the trial

By Zubeida Mustafa

VICTORIA Schofield shot into the limelight in Pakistan when she visited this country to attend the trial of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in 1978-79. The outcome of this visit was the book, Bhutto: Trial and Execution. Published in 1979 by Cassell, it was the first book to cover an event which was a landmark in Pakistan’s turbulent history. With the press stifled under a blanket of pre-censorship imposed by General Ziaul Haq, the people were starved for news. Schofield’s book attracted much attention and the copies which managed to find their way into the country were immediately doing the rounds to meet the demands of voracious readers.

There has to be a compelling reason for a Western writer to get interested in South Asia. In Schofield’s case the reason was her “friendship with Benazir Bhutto”, a contemporary at Oxford where the two were elected to the Oxford Union — Benazir as the president and Schofield as the librarian. When Benazir was leaving for home she invited Schofield to visit Pakistan. In the summer of 1977 came the military coup and Bhutto’s trial. Continue reading Beginning with the trial

The sun of Dawn

By Zubeida Mustafa and Maheen A. Rashdi

THE year was 1973 and it was the month of February — a time of crisis in national politics. President Bhutto had summarily dismissed the NAP governors of Balochistan and the NWFP. This paper reported the incident in banner headlines. Lost in those tumultuous events of the time was a change of another kind which took place the same day. Ahmad Ali Khan took over as acting editor of Dawn. Continue reading The sun of Dawn

Sifting wheat from chaff

 

 

 By Zubeida Mustafa

IT is college admission season. Look up the newspapers and you find them flooded with ads inviting applications for admission to impressive-sounding institutes, colleges and even universities claiming affiliation with foreign universities with all kinds of fancy names, mainly American and British.

Is this a manifestation of the process the Guardian of London dubbed as the “internationalization of higher education”? Partially, yes. In Britain they term it as trade in knowledge and skills. The white man’s burden is still around it would appear and the education sector needs the most help. Continue reading Sifting wheat from chaff