THE ROLE OF THE BRITISH RAJ IN SHAPING MODERN PAKISTAN: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63878/jalt1209Abstract
History would not be incomplete without discussing the ambivalent legacies of the British Raj and how it shaped the political, economic, and socio-cultural framework of South Asia in the year 1947 leading to the accession of Pakistan. This paper presents the view that colonial policies, disregarding their main intention to benefit the imperialist powers, actually gave birth to the incorporation of Pakistan both structural, through institutionalization of administration, encouragement of communal identities, and re-organization of the economy and system of education. It uses an approach of history to follow the emergence of modern bureaucracy, codification of legal systems and consolidation of power under the Raj which was passed on to Pakistan after independence. In addition, it discusses the approaches of the British economic policies that absorbed and alienated the subcontinent, which acted into regional inequalities to harden the apprehensions of marginalization in the minds of Muslims. The coming in of Western education and political reforms, which were first intentions to cement the colonies hold, also led to the awakening of the Muslim political consciousness and hence a true avenue through which the Muslim League demanded a people of their own. Through the examination of these related changes, this paper has illuminated the paradox of colonialism, that is, in the very same way that it created an oppressive system in South Asians, it furnished them with the means and structures of identity that they needed to imagine and demand Pakistan. The methodological approach that the given paper adopts is historical-analytical as the sources of primary data (governmental reports, constitutions, works by the contemporary leaders) and secondary scholarly papers are used to evaluate how the undisputable impact of the British Raj on the formation of modern Pakistan can be observed.
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