History of Parliamentary System of Government in Pakistan 1947 to 2002
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61506/01.00178Keywords:
Parliamentary System, Democratic Organization, PakistanAbstract
The British Parliamentary System in India has straightforwardly added to the development of parliament in Pakistan. The regular authoritative bodies picked the individuals from the Constituent Assembly. It might be said that the historical backdrop of a democratic organization in Pakistan is a background marked by overturning ubiquity based establishments and a past filled with making new assumptions with every misfortune. Pakistan keeps on making progress toward accomplishing an irrefutable and solid structure in view of well-known request. Vote based change to democratization included a verifiable cycle. This paper's system was subjective in nature. All through most of the parliamentary structure, obviously organization in administrative issues was continuously being deterred. With the heaviness of Martial Law, the administrative framework was at last unhindered. When contrasted with parliamentary, the authority structure has reliably outperformed it in Pakistan's situation on the grounds that to its more evolved economy. To evaluate the History of Parliamentary System of Government in Pakistan from 1947 to 2002. The fundamental motivation behind this paper is to incorporate the historical backdrop of parliamentary arrangement of Pakistan from its introduction to the world to year 2002. Also, in addition which job the parliament has played in the majority rule government of Pakistan in this time span. This paper likewise centers around the progressions in the financial dependability of Pakistan because of Parliamentary vote based system. This study draws together writing on the total history of the parliament and the parliamentary vote based system alongside its impact on the financial security of the Pakistan. The information was assembled from the information tanks, sites and the exploration work of early individuals. A certain solicitation in such a situation can notice plans in the improvement of political events and choose if these models have a typical subject of all time. The fundamental and assistant sources were used for getting information and social event data to complete the investigation and show up at the last revelations and recommendations.
References
Ahmed, D. (2007). Legitimacy crises in Pakistan (A comparative study of political behavior). Journal of Political Studies, 12(8).
Choudhury, G. W. (1969). Constitutional Development in Pakistan. The Journal of Asian Studies.
H.A.Rizvi. (2013). A Narrative of Pakistan’s nine Elections (1970-2008). The Firest 10 General Election of Pakistan. A Story of Pakistan’s Transition from Democracy above Rule of Law to Democracy under Rule of Law 1970-2013.
Hussain, M. (2011). Institution of Parliament in Pakistan: Evolution and Building Process (1947-1970). Journal of Political Studies, 18(2), 77-99.
Javaid, U., & Latif, A. (1991). Historical Analysis of Successive Governments in Pakistan: A History of First Six Decades, 1947-2007. In A. Kapur, Pakistan in Crisis (p. 256). London: Routledge.
Javaid, U., & Latif, A. (2017). Historical Analysis of Successive Governments in Pakistan: A History of First Six Decades, 1947-2007. Pakistan Vision, 18(1).
Javed, S. A. (2021, July 11). Time to rethink economic governance. Retrieved from thenews: https://www.thenews.com.pk/tns/detail/862308-time-to-rethink-economic-governance.
Khan, A., Habib, D. I., & Akhtar, D. (2022). A Comparative Study of Parliamentary & Presidential Systems of Government: Economic Implications for Pakistan. Journal of Economics, Management & Business Administration, 1(1), 1-10. DOI: https://doi.org/10.59075/jemba.v1i1.60
Lorenz, C. (2011). Business Register for Pakistan-Economic Advantages, Institutionalization and Legal Aspects. Contemporary Legal and Economic Issues, 3, 221.
Noor-ul-Haq. (2012). Civil-Military Relations in Pakistan. IPRI Journal, 12(2), 114.
PARLIAMENTARY HISTORY. (2022, August 25). Retrieved from National Assembly of Pakistan: https://na.gov.pk/en/content.php?id=75
Rizvi, H. A. (2000). The Military and Politics in Pakistan. Lahore:Sang-e-Meel Publication. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230599048
Talbot, I. (1998). Pakistan: A Modern History. London: C. Hurst & Co., 432.
W.Cox, G., & R.Weingast, B. (2018). Executive Constraint, Political Stability, and Economic Growth. Comparative Political Studies, 51(3), 279-303. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414017710254