experts
Aqil Shah
Visiting Scholar, South Asia Program

about


Aqil Shah is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Aqil Shah was a visiting scholar in the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He also serves as the Wick Cary associate professor in the Department of International and Area Studies at the University of Oklahoma. His research focuses on democratization, civil-military relations, U.S. foreign policy, and security issues with a regional focus on South Asia, especially Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Aqil held research fellowships at the Harvard Society of Fellows; Stanford University’s Center for Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law; and the Program in Arms Control, Disarmament and International Security at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He has also been a visiting scholar at the Center for Policy Research, New Delhi; the National Endowment for Democracy; and the Henry L. Stimson Center in Washington, DC.

Previously, he was a policy advisor in the Asia-Pacific Governance Program of the United Nations Development Program, a senior analyst in the South Asia office of the International Crisis Group and a columnist in Pakistan.

Aqil is the author of The Army and Democracy: Military Politics in Pakistan (Harvard University Press, 2014).


affiliations
education
PhD, Columbia University, MPhil, University of Oxford, B.A., Pakistan
languages
English, Pashtu, Urdu

All work from Aqil Shah

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15 Results
In The Media
in the media
The Shambolic End of Imran Khan

On April 10, Imran Khan’s three-plus years as prime minister of Pakistan came to an unceremonious end. His government fell after losing a no-confidence vote, a standard procedural tool in parliamentary democracies for ousting prime ministers who have lost their majority in the legislature.

· April 15, 2022
commentary
Global Views of Biden’s Democracy Summit

As U.S. President Joe Biden convenes this week’s Summit for Democracy, governments around the world are gearing up to participate—or not. Here’s what some global players are looking for.

commentary
Pakistan’s “Moderate Taliban” Strategy Won’t Hold Up—For Anyone

Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan, neighboring Pakistan has promoted a vision of moderate Taliban rule and has argued on the group’s behalf for international support. But as the myth of moderation dissipates, will Pakistan’s plans pan out?

· September 30, 2021
event
The Taliban in Afghanistan: Political and Security Challenges
September 29, 2021

Join us for a conversation on Afghanistan and its neighbors with renowned Pakistani journalist and award-winning author, Ahmed Rashid and Carnegie's Aqil Shah.

In The Media
in the media
Does the New Taliban Government Reflect Its Promise of an Inclusive Administration?

A discussion about the new Taliban government and what to expect going forward.

· September 8, 2021
Q&A
How Will the Taliban Deal With Other Islamic Extremist Groups?

The Taliban are back in power in Afghanistan. How will they deal with the other Islamic extremist groups that have mushroomed in the region since the Taliban were last in charge?

· August 31, 2021
commentary
Afghanistan Under the Taliban

Experts from throughout Carnegie’s global network assess the stark humanitarian toll, the regional ramifications, and the diplomatic challenges posed by the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan.

Q&A
What Will Happen to Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Uneasy Border?

Pakistan’s military leaders may see the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan as a net win, but their cynical, realpolitik support for the Taliban is not risk-free.

· August 13, 2021
commentary
Do U.S. Drone Strikes Cause Blowback? Evidence from Pakistan and Beyond

New interview and survey data from Pakistan provide little or no evidence to support the claim that U.S. drone strikes generate blowback and contribute to the radicalization of local populations.

· May 4, 2018
International Security
commentary
The Dog That Did Not Bark: The Army and the Emergency in India

The Indian military chose to stay out of politics when Indira Gandhi imposed Emergency rule, despite numerous factors that might have facilitated an intervention.

· October 17, 2017
Commonwealth & Comparative Politics