Category News Views
SDG 9: Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure

SDG 9 focuses on building resilient infrastructure, promoting sustainable industrialization, and fostering innovation. While global economies are advancing in technology, smart infrastructure, and green industries, Pakistan lags behind due to outdated systems, low investment in research, and weak industrial policy. This article examines the global significance of SDG 9, Pakistan’s challenges, and the urgent need for industrial revival rooted in Islamic ethics, economic wisdom, and strategic planning.
SGD 8 – Decent Work and Economic Growth

SDG 8 emphasizes sustained, inclusive, and sustainable economic growth with decent work opportunities for all. While the world pushes toward innovation-driven economies and formalized labor markets, Pakistan struggles with unemployment, underemployment, and dependence on informal sectors. This article examines the global significance of decent work, Pakistan’s economic dilemmas, and the need for reform grounded in Islamic ethics, structural planning, and strategic action.
خاندانی نظام: روایات، چیلنجز، اور جدید حقایق کو سمجھنا
Global Family Systems Bridging Traditions, Challenges

SDG 5: Gender Equality

Women make up half of Pakistan’s population, yet face systemic barriers in education, employment, politics, and personal freedoms. SDG 5 calls for eliminating discrimination and ensuring equal opportunities for women and girls. This article examines the challenges, progress, and strategic reforms needed to unlock women’s potential for national prosperity.
The Biological Reality of Gender

Biology recognizes only two sexes: male and female. Modern debates blur this clarity, but society must combine compassion with truth. This article explores the science, social implications, and a way forward that respects both reality and human dignity.
Pakistan Today and the Road Ahead
The Soldier’s Paradox

This study maps the “soldier’s paradox”: how the virtues forged by military moulding—discipline, cohesion, decisiveness—become either assets or liabilities in civilian life and politics. Through theory, case vignettes (Eisenhower, de Gaulle, Grant, Musharraf, Pinochet), and an institutional lens on Pakistan, it shows why soldiers must be re-moulded for consent-based leadership and how constitutional boundaries keep command culture democratic.
Pakistan’s Emergence and East Pakistan’s Struggle
