This is the capstone article of a bigger task that takes a gander at Pakistan's medium-term future, characterized as the following five to seven years (2012-2017). Other task components incorporate a synopsis of past expectations of Pakistan s future (Appendix) and fourteen articles authorized for a workshop at the Rockefeller Conference Center in Bellagio, Italy in May 2010. The writers were asked to quickly put forward significant factors or factors that may shape Pakistan s future and to estimate on the probable outcomes.1 This exposition pursues a similar example. After a concise outline of late improvements, it inspects various components disseminated among four classes and after that puts forward various elective prospects. It likewise investigates the methodological issues characteristic in this activity and talks about approach choices, particularly for the United States, other Western nations, Japan, and India.
About the Author
Stephen P. Cohen is a senior individual in Foreign Policy at Brookings. He came to Brookings in 1998 after a long vocation as teacher of political theory and history at the University of Illinois. Dr. Cohen recently filled in as researcher in-habitation at the Ford Foundation in New Delhi and as an individual from the Policy Planning Staff of the U.S. State Department. He has likewise instructed at colleges in India, Japan and Singapore. He is as of now an individual from the National Academy of Science's Committee on International Security and Arms Control. Dr. Cohen is the writer or editorial manager of in excess of eleven books, concentrating principally on South Asian security issues. His latest book, Arming without Aiming: India modernizes its Military (coauthored with Sunil Das Gupta, 2010), centers around India's military development. Dr. Cohen got Bachelor's and Master s degrees at the University of Chicago, and a PhD from the University of Wisconsin.
About the Author
Stephen P. Cohen is a senior individual in Foreign Policy at Brookings. He came to Brookings in 1998 after a long vocation as teacher of political theory and history at the University of Illinois. Dr. Cohen recently filled in as researcher in-habitation at the Ford Foundation in New Delhi and as an individual from the Policy Planning Staff of the U.S. State Department. He has likewise instructed at colleges in India, Japan and Singapore. He is as of now an individual from the National Academy of Science's Committee on International Security and Arms Control. Dr. Cohen is the writer or editorial manager of in excess of eleven books, concentrating principally on South Asian security issues. His latest book, Arming without Aiming: India modernizes its Military (coauthored with Sunil Das Gupta, 2010), centers around India's military development. Dr. Cohen got Bachelor's and Master s degrees at the University of Chicago, and a PhD from the University of Wisconsin.
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