Academic literature on the topic 'Pakistan Sind'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pakistan Sind"

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KHUHRO, HAMIDA. "Masjid Manzilgah, 1939-40. Test Case for Hindu-Muslim Relations in Sind." Modern Asian Studies 32, no. 1 (1998): 49–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x98002613.

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Masjid Manzilgah forms a chapter in a biography of Mohammed Ayub Khuhro on which the author is currently working. Khuhro (1901-80) was an important politician of Sind whose political career spanned over fifty years from 1921 to the end of the ‘seventies. He was a member of the Bombay Legislative Council from 1923 till the severance of the connection between Bombay and Sind in 1935 when the latter province attained autonomy under the Government of India Act of 1935. He was in the forefront of the political struggle for the ‘separation’ of Sind and after 1936 became a front-ranking Muslim League leader who helped organize the party in Sind and put it behind the Pakistan movement. Khuhro was the first Premier of Sind after independence and held that office altogether three times. He came into confrontation with Jinnah over the issue of severing Karachi from Sind and became identified as the protagonist of states' rights (or provincial autonomy) and as a champion of politicians' supremacy in the fight against the domination of the bureaucracy which bedevilled Pakistani politics for nearly half a century of its existence. This fight resulted in his repeated enforced exile from the political field depriving Pakistan of one of its most experienced public men during its formative years.
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David, Maya Khemlani, Mumtaz Ali, and Gul Muhammad Baloch. "Language shift or maintenance." Language Problems and Language Planning 41, no. 1 (2017): 26–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lplp.41.1.02dav.

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Abstract Pakistan is a multilingual country with six major and over 59 minor languages. However, the languages used by the domains of power, (government, corporate sector, media and education), are English and Urdu. Compared to the other regional languages in Pakistan, the Sindhi language has a more emancipated position in the state-run schools and some other domains. The present study seeks to explore the extent to which the use of Sindhi language has been shifted or maintained, and to survey the patterns of language use in certain domains through Fishman’s domain concept for the determination of language shift within the community concerned. A mixed method data collection including questionnaires and in-depth interviews was conducted to find out whether Sindhis in the Sind province of Pakistan maintain their heritage language in specific domains and to ascertain the impact of Pakistan’s language policy on Sindhi language. The results show that Sindhis in Sindh province fully maintain their language and behold sentimental affiliation with it as part of their cultural identity. The Sindhis have successfully uplifted and maintained their language in education and other vital domains. The Sindhi community enjoys a higher ethno-linguistic vitality than the other ethnic groups in Pakistan.
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Biagi, Paolo, and Mauro Cremaschi. "The Harappan flint quarries of the Rohri Hills (Sind-Pakistan)." Antiquity 65, no. 246 (1991): 97–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00079321.

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Flint quarries in the Rohri hills supplied stone to the city of Mohenjo-Daro, out on the silty river-plain and lacking local supply. A new survey has identified workshop sites and an extraordinary scale of production.
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Mujahid, S. A., and S. Hussain. "Measurement of natural radioactivity from soil samples of Sind, Pakistan." Radiation Protection Dosimetry 145, no. 4 (2010): 351–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rpd/ncq423.

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Usmani, Parveen, and M. Rais Ahmed. "Some probably new species of smaller benthonic foraminifera from the Lakhra area, Sind, Pakistan." Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Monatshefte 1986, no. 9 (1986): 570–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/njgpm/1986/1986/570.

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Basit, Muhammad, Asif Sajjad, Zama Mahmood, Muhammad Sohail, and Saba Khan Khurshid. "Spatial assessment of transgender population: The deprived community on Pakistan." Arts and Social Sciences 1, no. 1 (2020): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.34154/10.34154/2020-assj-0202-01-12/euraass.

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Transgender are the most deprived gender in the world. Pakistan recognized transgender to be the third gender in 2009, and itis considered to be a milestone in South Asia. Moreover, Pakistani apex court ordered that transgender must be counted separately in the census of 2017, and separate column was made for the said purpose. The objective of the study is to explore transgender population in Pakistan and trend of transgender an urban and rural areas of Pakistan. Secondary data is derived from 2017 census;and it is further explained through maps using ARC-GIS 9.3 software, tables and figures. Total transgender population of Pakistan is 10418. Out of which 8.3% are living in KP, 0.25% is living in FATA, 64.39% are living in the Punjab, 24.25% are living in Sind, 1.04% is living in Baluchistan, and 1.27% in the federal capital territory. Maximum population of transgender is found in Punjab, and minimum is in FATA. Thetransgender population in urbanareas is (73.44%) while (26.56%) is in rural areas. Furthermore, this study might be of immense help to highlight and protect the rights of transgender, and to solve the problems being faced by them especially in Pakistan and generally in the world.
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Mubbashar, Malik Hussain. "Development of mental health services in Pakistan." International Psychiatry 1, no. 1 (2003): 11–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s1749367600007633.

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Pakistan is a country comprising four provinces: Punjab, Sind, Northwest Frontier Province and Baluchistan, in addition to the federally administered tribal areas and the federal capital territory of Islamabad. It is bordered by China, Afghanistan, Iran and India. It has a population of 152 million (excluding an estimated 3–4 million Afghan and Bangladeshi immigrants) and an area of 796 095 km2.
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Ibrahim, Shahnaz H., and Zulfiqar A. Bhutta. "Prevalence of early childhood disability in a rural district of Sind, Pakistan." Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 55, no. 4 (2013): 357–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.12103.

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Donald, Kirsty. "Prevalence of early childhood disability in a rural district of Sind, Pakistan." Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 55, no. 4 (2013): 300–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.12128.

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Majid, Nomaan. "The joint system of share tenancy and self‐cultivation: Evidence from Sind, Pakistan." Journal of Peasant Studies 25, no. 3 (1998): 63–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03066159808438675.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pakistan Sind"

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Collinet, Annabelle. "Au prisme de la céramique : le Sind et l'islam : culture matérielle du sud du Pakistan, IIe-XIIe / VIIIe-XVIIIe siècles." Paris 1, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA010563.

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Cette thèse présente une céramique inédite, provenant des recherches archéologiques menées par la MAFS (Mission Archéologique Française au Sind) et sous la direction de M. Kervran, entre 1989 et 2002. La céramique étudiée a été découverte lors des fouilles de la forteresse de Sehwan Sarif dans le Sind central, des fouilles des établissements portuaires de Lahorl Bandar et de Ratto Kot, et en surface de 23 sites de la zone deltaïque de I'Indus. Ce matériel a permis de dresser une première chrono-typologie de la céramique du Sind, des débuts de la période islamique (VIIIe siècle) jusqu'a I'époque mogole. A cette approche chronologique s'ajoutent I'étude de cette céramique du point de vue technologique d'une part et en termes de production, de distribution et d'échanges régionaux d'autre part. La céramique du Sind à la période islamique se caractérise par des assemblages constitués de céramiques rouges communes et ornées de décors peints, de céramiques rouges estampées, moulées ou encore gravées, de céramiques a pâtes grises ou noires et de céramiques argileuses glaçurées. Ces types sont a la fois issus de très anciennes traditions spécifiquement régionales, appartiennent a I'aire culturelle indienne et enfin, a la culture céramique spécifique a l'Islam et caractérisée par I'utilisation de céramiques glaçurées
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Kumbher, Kamran. "Practising Hindusim in the Islamic Repulblic of Pakistan : devotion and the politics of untouchability in Ramdev Pir's tradition of Sindh." Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020EHES0043.

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Cette étude est une tentative de comprendre le processus par lequel une secte religieuse mineure s'est installée dans une nouvelle région au passé historique complexe et comment elle s'est transformée par la suite en organisation politique. Dans ma thèse, je me concentre sur la transformation d'un panth hindou dans le Sindh depuis son arrivée au 19ème siècle pendant la colonisation britannique des régions transfrontalières voisines du Rajasthan et du Gujarat, jusqu'à leur transformation en un mouvement politique. Les membres ont commencé à s'organiser en tant que communauté religieuse autour d'un site religieux principal situé dans le Tando Allahyar et, plus tard, ils ont été confrontés à des scissions qui ont provoqué l'émergence de multiples sites, justifiées par leurs différences linguistiques, régionales et la guerre de 1971 entre les Indiens et les Pakistanais. Il est important de préciser ici que cette communauté a été classée dès l'époque britannique comme Intouchables, pour parler franchement, bien que différentes dénominations lui aient été données, comme les castes répertoriées, classification qui est toujours utilisée par l'administration pakistanaise. L’épisode de rupture au sein de la communauté a restructuré et réorganisé le panth, puisqu'il a entraîné l'apparition de différents modèles de changements dans la même Panth en raison de leurs différents sites et groupes. En outre, ils sont devenus moins connectés qu'auparavant mais, fait intéressant, le site central est resté important et c'est pourquoi la partie principale de cette étude lui est consacrée. Et après la guerre, l'allégation et la relation de méfiance à l'égard des hindous en général ont conduit un groupe de la communauté à se solidifier politiquement avec une nouvelle identité politique en raison de leur nombre dominant et de leur frontière commune avec l'Inde. Cela s'est fait par la circulation de la littérature de dévotion d'abord, en enregistrant la nostalgie de leurs anciennes régions et l'importance du culte du sauveur et du héros. La majeure partie de la littérature dévotionnelle a été produite en 1990, suivie plus tard par la production de la littérature politique. Elle a contribué à l'établissement d'un mouvement dalit dans une ville. Il est vraiment intéressant de noter qu'en 1980, le mouvement et la littérature dalits ont été produits dans l'état indien du Gujarat et plus tard, ils ont été suivis par le Sind au Pakistan, bien que la politique au Gujarat ne soit pas discutée de façon majeure dans la présente étude. Cette politique identitaire a réagi différemment en raison de l'emplacement de leur nouveau site religieux multiple, de leur nombre dans la population et de leurs propres différences au sein de la Panth. Toute la thèse est conclue sur la façon dont un Panth hindou a changé et transformé sa politique hindoue dans un État islamique
This study is an attempt to understand the process through which a minor religious sect settled in a new region with an intricate historical past and transform later in to a political organization. In my thesis, I focus on the transformation of a Hindu panth in Sindh from its arrival in the 19th century during British colonization from the neighboring cross border regions of Rajasthan and Gujarat, to their transformation into a political movement. The members started to organize themselves as a religious community around a main religious site located in Tando Allahyar and later on, it faced splits which caused the emergence of multiple sites, justified by their linguistic, regional differences and Indo Pak war of 1971. It is important to state here this community was classified from the British times as Untouchables, to speak frankly, althobreakuperent denominations were given to it, such as Scheduled castes, a classification which is still used by Pakistan administration.This breakup episode has re-structured and re-organized the panth, since it has led to the emergence of different patterns of changes in the same panth because of their different sites and groups. Furthermore, they got less connected as compared to before but interestingly, the central site remained impo, in general,hat is why the main part of this study is devoted to it. And after the war, the allegation and relationship of mistrust on Hindus in general led a group among the communitythe to solidify politically with new political identity because of their dominant number and shared border with India. It has been done through circulation of devotional literature first, recording the longingness for their old regions and the importance of savior and hero worship. Most of the devotional literature was produced in 1990 which later was followed by producing the and literatureerature. It contributed to establish a Dalit movement in one city. It is really interesting that in the 1980, the Dalit movement and literature was prothe duced in the Indian state of Gujarat and later it was followed by Sindh in Pakistan though the politics in Gujarat is not majorly discussed in present study. This Identity politics have responded differently because of the location of their new religious multiple sites, their number in the population and their own differences within the panth. The whole thesis is concluded that how a Hindu Panth changed and transformed their Hindu politics in an Islamic state
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Cheesman, David. "Landlord power and rural indebtedness in colonial Sind, 1865-1901 /." Richmond (GB) : Curzon, 1997. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb36177575s.

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Berrenberg, Jeanne. "Sufis, Rebellen, Untertanen Geschichte(n) aus dem Sindh/Pakistan in einer ethnologischen Lesart." Berlin Weissensee-Verl, 2007. http://deposit.d-nb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?id=3051803&prov=M&dok_var=1&dok_ext=htm.

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Kamdar, M. S. "Agricultural marketing and agrarian relations in Pakistan : A case study of the Nawabshah District, Sind." Thesis, University of Salford, 1987. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.381815.

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Shahani, Uttara. "Sind and the partition of India, c.1927-1952." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2019. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/290268.

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Sindhi Hindus comprise the world's most widespread South Asian diaspora. When the British divided their Indian empire in 1947, unlike Punjab, Bengal, and Assam, they did not partition Sind (today a part of Pakistan), despite the minority campaign for a partition of the region. Sind's partition in 1947 was a deterritorialised and demographic one, producing over a million 'non-Muslim' refugees who resettled in India and abroad. A frequently overlooked region in histories of South Asia, Sind is of profound importance to the history of the partition of India. In the decades preceding partition Sind formed the core of the demand for the creation of 'Muslim majority' provinces that later gave Pakistan its territorial basis. This thesis outlines a new history of partition from the pre-partition Sindhi movement for separation from the Bombay Presidency. It explores the hardening of communal identities in a province renowned for its blurred religious boundaries and the ambiguities of defining a 'Muslim majority' province in the run-up to the foundation of Pakistan. Partition histories emphasise the role of sudden and unexpected genocidal violence in creating refugees. The processes of nation-formation and establishing new political-legal sovereignties also shaped refugee flows. Sindhi Hindu migration at the time of partition is also located within their older histories of mobility and suggests a more complex picture of displacements at the time of partition. Largely unwelcome in India, Sindhi refugees exercised a considerable amount of initiative, in rehabilitating themselves and in challenging the state's slow response to their demands for rehabilitation. Using rarely studied legal archives, this thesis charts how, despite being a stateless minority, Sindhi refugees' legal campaigns shaped the Indian constitution and informed broader notions of Indian citizenship. Refugee initiatives to create a 'new' Sind and port in Kutch collided with the governmental agenda to secure the integration of the princely states and harness their economic resources to the Indian Union. By investigating the 'failures' of this attempt to re-establish 'Sind in India', this thesis provides unique insights into the fraught interaction between refugee resettlement and the birth of a new nation.
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Rizvi, Muneer Ali Shah. "An analysis of the structure, conduct and performance of the date marketing system in Sind - Pakistan." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1985. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.328101.

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Haines, Timothy Daniel. "Building the Empire, building the nation : water, land and the politics of river development in Sind 1898-1969." Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, 2011. http://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/131eccc5-0dda-22dd-5f83-61deaccd07ac/9/.

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Major attempts to control the natural environment characterized government ‘developmental' activity in twentieth-century Sind. This thesis argues that the construction of three barrage dams across the River Indus, along with a network of irrigation canals, enacted human control over nature as a political project. The Raj and its successor state in Sind, Pakistan, thereby claimed legitimacy through their capacity to benefit humans by re-modelling the landscape. These claims depended on an implied narrative of material progress, which irrigation development was expected to bring about, in a province considered technologically and socially backward. In allocating land that was newly made available for cultivation, government officials found an unprecedented opportunity to also re-shape agrarian society. As well as providing the means by which ‘ideal types' of cultivator could be encouraged to proliferate, the development of Sind's irrigation system was based on concepts of modernization that promoted increasing state intervention in agrarian life to render a ‘disordered' society more easily governable. This trend was constrained, however, by successive administrations' need to balance the lure of radical modernization against the powerful claims on new land of local magnates. The colonial belief in the agricultural, economic, and social benefits of large-scale irrigation projects was transplanted into the post-colonial state. The construction of irrigation works, the colonization of land, and their political implications before and after Independence are therefore analyzed, in order to demonstrate how and why the logic of large infrastructure schemes remained consistent. At the same time, differences in how successive administrations framed and enacted barrage projects are shown to have depended on contemporary circumstances. In the process, the thesis sheds new light on the tensions between and within the central and provincial governments, demonstrating the contested nature of concepts of Imperial governance, nation-building, and material progress.
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Gayer, Laurent. "Les politiques internationales de l'identité : significations internationales des mobilisations identitaires des Sikhs (Inde) et des Mohajirs (Pakistan)." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004IEPP0012.

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Boni, Filippo. "Civil-military relations in Pakistan : an analysis of Sino-Pakistani ties, 2001-2016." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2017. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43618/.

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This thesis assesses the extent of military prerogatives in Pakistan’s domestic politics, by focusing on Sino-Pakistani relations in the post 9/11 period. The study departs from the coup-centric approach largely adopted in the literature on civil-military relations and develops a continuum of civil-military relations which identifies four different intensities of civilian control over the military. Such a scale is deployed to gauge empirically the military’s sway in four decision-making areas: internal security, foreign policy, economic policy and elite recruitment. This structure is used to analyse the three case studies presented in the thesis: 1) the development of the port of Gwadar; 2) the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor; and 3) Sino-Pakistani relations in the Afghan scenario. The empirical chapters are organised around elite interviews conducted during fieldwork in Pakistan and triangulated with primary and secondary sources. From the analysis conducted in the thesis emerges a new pattern of civil-military relations in Pakistan, a situation in which the civilians and the military are sharing power to the benefit of both parties. The military have found it in their interest to exercise power less overtly and to retain control of internal security and foreign policy behind the curtain of a democratic dispensation. The civilians, on their side, have managed to erode military influence in the areas of elite recruitment and economic policy, in their attempts to tackle the energy crisis and to win the 2018 general elections. Such a pattern starts taking shape in the 2008-2013 period, but it becomes more crystallised in the post-2013 time frame. The thesis assesses specifically military prerogatives in the context of Pakistan’s relations with China, but also extends the picture in the final chapter to the wider developments in civil-military relations in Pakistan, in order to provide a comprehensive and solid analysis of the issue under examination.
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Books on the topic "Pakistan Sind"

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Maclean, Derryl N. Religion and society in Arab Sind. E.J. Brill, 1989.

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Aye, Mansur. The trip to upper & lower Sind. International Cultlure Promotors [sic], 1986.

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Backhausen, Manfred J. Die Opfer sind schuld!: Machtmissbrauch in Pakistan : eine Dokumentation. Akropolis, 1993.

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Politics of regionalism in Pakistan: A study of Sind province. Kalinga Publications, 2003.

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Sind (Pakistan). Sindhī Adabī Borḍ, ред. Mak̲h̲zanulmak̲h̲t̤ūt̤āt: Sindhī Adabī Borḍ main maujūd qalmī nusk̲h̲an te mushtamil mak̲h̲zan. Sindhī Adabī Borḍ, 2013.

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Memon, Yameen. Capacity building for participatory irrigation management in Sind province of Pakistan. International Water Management Institute, 2000.

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Sufi saints and state power: The pirs of Sind, 1843-1947. Cambridge University Press, 1992.

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Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah: The Sind story, 1940-1947 : towards Pakistan ... National Documentation Wing, Cabinet Division, Govt. of Pakistan, 2009.

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Pakistan. General clauses acts, (federal & provincial) with adaptation, revision & extension laws, federal/Blauchistan/N.W.F.P./Punjab/Sind. Lahore Law Times Publication, 1991.

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Solangi, Ghulam Rasul. Research on the cultivation of edible mushrooms in Pakistan: Investigations on tropical mushrooms of Sind. Dept. of Plant Pathology, Faculty of Crop Protection, Sind Agriculture University, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pakistan Sind"

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Wilke, Boris. "Pakistan (Sind, Religionskonflikt)." In Das Kriegsgeschehen 2001. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-322-97571-3_26.

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Ansari, Sarah. "Political Legacies of Pre-1947 Sind." In The Political Inheritance of Pakistan. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-11556-3_8.

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Ansari, Sarah. "The Movement of Indian Muslims to West Pakistan after 1947: Partition-Related Migration and its Consequences for the Pakistani Province of Sind." In Migration: The Asian Experience. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-23678-7_8.

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Malik, Iftikhar H. "Sindh: The Politics of Authority and Ethnicity." In State and Civil Society in Pakistan. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230376298_10.

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Malik, Iftikhar H. "The Rise of the Muhajir Qaumi Movement and Ethnic Politics in Sindh." In State and Civil Society in Pakistan. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230376298_11.

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Wang, Xu. "Sino-Pakistan Economic and Trade Relations: Status Quo and Challenges." In Current Chinese Economic Report Series. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-45940-9_5.

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Naeem, Anila. "Evolution and repercussions of the heritage designation process in Sindh, Pakistan." In The Routledge Handbook on Historic Urban Landscapes in the Asia-Pacific. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429486470-7.

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Qureshi, Sumera, G. M. Mastoi, Allah Bux Ghanghro, and A. Waheed Mastoi. "Impact of Sewage Water on Quality of Fullali Canal Water, Hyderabad, Sindh, Pakistan." In Energy, Environment and Sustainable Development. Springer Vienna, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-0109-4_19.

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Magsi, Habibullah, and M. Javed Sheikh. "Seawater Intrusion: Land Degradation and Food Insecurity Among Coastal Communities of Sindh, Pakistan." In Regional Cooperation in South Asia. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-56747-1_12.

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Yaseen, Ghulam, Mushtaq Ahmad, Daniel Potter, Muhammad Zafar, Shazia Sultana, and Sehrosh Mir. "Ethnobotany of Medicinal Plants for Livelihood and Community Health in Deserts of Sindh-Pakistan." In Plant and Human Health, Volume 1. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-93997-1_24.

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Conference papers on the topic "Pakistan Sind"

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Yue Ma, Xiaomeng Liu, Xiaojuan Li, Yonghua Sun, and Xiaomeng Li. "Rapid assessment of flood disaster loss in Sind and Punjab province, Pakistan based on RS and GIS." In 2011 International Conference on Multimedia Technology (ICMT). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icmt.2011.6003024.

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Ujan, Imran Anwar, Imdad Ali Ismaili, and Chatar Veer Suthar. "Telemedicine system for THAR (Sindh, Pakistan)." In 2012 ICME International Conference on Complex Medical Engineering (CME). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccme.2012.6275661.

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Gul, Farid, and Fang Jiancheng. "En-route Alignment and Calibration of SINS by Celestial Observation and Distinctiveness of Free Fall Trajectory." In 2005 Pakistan Section Multitopic Conference. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/inmic.2005.334443.

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Ahmed, Waseem, Rizwan Ahmed Memon, and Abdul Fatah Abbasi. "Development of Eco-Industrial Park in Sindh, Pakistan." In 2020 3rd International Conference on Computing, Mathematics and Engineering Technologies (iCoMET). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icomet48670.2020.9073849.

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Ahmed, Mudeer, Muhammad Noman Ali, and Imtiaz Ali Memon. "A review of wind energy potential in Sindh, Pakistan." In 5TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (EESD-2018). AIP Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5115376.

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Khero, Zarif, Babar Naeem, and Ibrahim Samoo. "Dam Breach Flood Inundation Modeling for Aripir Dam, Sindh, Pakistan." In World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2021. American Society of Civil Engineers, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784483466.018.

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Nawaz, Mohammad Ali, Basit Khan, and Hidayat Hasan. "Response of Sindh Ibex () to Petroleum Exploration in Khirthar National Park, Pakistan." In SPE International Conference on Health, Safety, and Environment in Oil and Gas Exploration and Production. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/86579-ms.

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Zaidi, Arjumand, Nabeel Khan, Bakhshal Lashari, Farooq Laghari, and Vengus Panhwar. "AGRICULTURAL WATER BALANCE STUDY IN SINDH (PAKISTAN) USING SATELLITE-DERIVED ACTUAL EVAPOTRANSPIRATION." In 5th International Electronic Conference on Water Sciences. MDPI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ecws-5-08021.

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Muzaffer, Ramsha, Arjumand Z. Zaidi, and Saad ul Haque. "Water Balance Study of Manchar Lake (Sindh, Pakistan) Using Landsat and Sentinel 3A." In IGARSS 2020 - 2020 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/igarss39084.2020.9324492.

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Talpur, Zenobia, Talal Naseer, Abdul Rafiue Memon, and Arjumand Zaidi. "IMPACT OF FLOODS ON VEGETATION COVER IN THE SANGHAR DISTRICT OF SINDH, PAKISTAN." In 5th International Electronic Conference on Water Sciences. MDPI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ecws-5-08009.

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Reports on the topic "Pakistan Sind"

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Mir, Ali, Irfan Masood, Mumraiz Khan, et al. Expanding services to detect, manage, and prevent pre-eclampsia and eclampsia in Tando Allahyar District of Sindh Province, Pakistan. Population Council, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh11.1023.

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Rana, Abdul Wajid. Creating fiscal space for enhancing public investment in Sindh agriculture sector: A qualitative study of provincial spending in Pakistan. International Food Policy Research Institute, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133488.

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Khan, A. H., B. Lashari, M. A. Khuwaja, A. A. Memon, and G. V. Skogerboe. Water level fluctuations and discharge variability in the Mirpurkhas Sub-Division, Jamrao Canal, Nara Circle, Sindh Province, Pakistan. Annexures. International Irrigation Management Institute (IIMI). Pakistan National Program, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.5337/2011.001.

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Yamano, Takashi, Noriko Sato, and Babur Wasim Arif. The Impact of COVID-19 and Locust Invasion on Farm Households in Punjab and Sindh: Analysis from Cross-Sectional Surveys in Pakistan. Asian Development Bank, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22617/wps210259-2.

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Abstract:
This paper presents the results of two mobile phone surveys conducted by the Asian Development Bank among farmers in Punjab and Sindh provinces in Pakistan in mid-2020 during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. The surveys collected information about how COVID-19-related measures and economic and transport disruptions affected farmers’ harvests, marketing efforts, input prices, and financial needs. The surveys found that the COVID-19 pandemic had significant negative impacts on farm households in both provinces. The paper provides additional context on COVID-19-related effects on local and regional economies and food supply chains. It also covers a simultaneous locust invasion along the India–Pakistan border, which has created “crisis within a crisis” in the surveyed provinces and exacerbated conditions that could lead to famine, disease, and increased poverty.
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Naeem, Ghazala, and Jamila Nawaz. Coastal Hazard Early Warning Systems in Pakistan: Tsunami and Cyclone Early Warning Dissemination: Gaps and Capacities in Coastal Areas of Balochistan and Sindh Provinces. Oxfam GB, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2016.620148.

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Lateral relationships in the Laki formation, Ganjo Takkar and Saidpur outlier, Hyderabad District, Sind Province, Pakistan. US Geological Survey, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/mf2084.

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Satellite image map Sindh, Pakistan. US Geological Survey, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.3133/i2587h.

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Assessing community midwives' knowledge of PE/E management in Sindh, Pakistan. Population Council, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh7.1006.

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Country Study on Out-of-School Children in the Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab and Sindh Provinces of Pakistan. (All Children in School by 2015: Global Initiative on out-of-school children). UNICEF Pakistan, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.15220/uis-unicef-cntry-balochistan-2013-en.

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