In recent years, scholars of International Relations have increasingly turned their attention to the question of how to decolonize knowledge. While emerging debates and initiatives mark a critical step toward exposing the disciplines embedded power structures, there remains a striking lack of systematic empirical research into how these asymmetries are reproduced and experienced within the Global South itself. This book explores the coloniality of power and knowledge in Pakistan through an examination of Pakistani International Relations. It not only unveils the hegemonic processes embedded within the western capitalist structures of knowledge production but also explores how the eurocentrism of International Relations in Pakistan is sustained and maintained through a coloniality of knowledge and power which is designed to promote western epistemologies and emulate western standards. This book, consequently, provides a view of epistemic oppression from below. In doing so, it is an initial attempt to explore how the process of decolonization can begin to address the issues embedded in the coloniality of knowledge demonstrated through an exploration of the International Relations discipline in Pakistan.
Chapter 1: Introduction.
Chapter 2: The International Relations
Discipline and the Coloniality of Knowledge and Power.
Chapter 3: Pakistani
Social Sciences and International Relations: From Colonialism to
Coloniality.
Chapter 4: Coloniality of Knowledge and Pakistani International
Relations: Mental Captivity and Higher Eductaion.
Chapter 5: Coloniality and
Militarization of Pakistani International Relations: Neoliberal Education
and Militarized Knowledge.
Chapter 6: Conclusion: A Commentary on Pakistans
Decolonial Future.
Dr. Ahmed W. Waheed is the Executive Director of ROADS Initiative, Pakistan and an Honorary Research Fellow at the School of Policy and Global Affairs, City St. Georges University of London. He has a PhD in Political Science from Queen Mary University of London and is the author of the books The Wrong Ally: Pakistans State Sovereignty under US Dependence and Constructing Pakistan through Knowledge Production in International Relations and Area Studies.