And Political History Of Pakistan By Hamid Khan.pdf __hot__: Constitutional

Adeel saw the interplay of personalities—prime ministers who sought consensus, opposition leaders who accused them of betrayal, activists who refused silence. He realized the book’s accounts weren’t abstract events but choices with human faces. He pictured midnight sessions where a lone MP switched sides not out of greed but fear for his family, and bench rulings where courage cost careers.

– I can give you a detailed chapter-wise summary or outline of major themes (e.g., the 1956, 1962, 1973 constitutions, martial laws, the Lawyers’ Movement, the 18th Amendment, etc.). the Lawyers’ Movement

Why is Hamid Khan’s book preferred over other historians like Ian Talbot or Lawrence Ziring? Because Khan isolates four recurring pathologies: the 18th Amendment