Ethnic disloyalty or federal loyalty? A case of contesting Baloch representation in postcolonial Pakistan

This article captures the representation of the Baloch ethnic minority in Pakistan’s multinational federation. The research establishes a taxonomy of Baloch representatives and their contesting ideological positions by analysing a sample of news articles published in Pakistan’s national and internat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shahal Khoso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Political Science
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2024.1476454/full
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Summary:This article captures the representation of the Baloch ethnic minority in Pakistan’s multinational federation. The research establishes a taxonomy of Baloch representatives and their contesting ideological positions by analysing a sample of news articles published in Pakistan’s national and international newspapers between 2006 and 2024. This approach provides fresh insights into the complex dynamics of minority representation for the Baloch. The study classifies the contesting groups of Baloch representatives into three clusters: (a) The federalists, (b) The nationalists, and (c) The secessionists. Not restricting its scope to periodisation, the research further investigates if there are linkages between the British colonial view of the Baloch, their treatment as a belligerent ethnic group and the submission of their ethnic loyalty in the postcolonial federation of Pakistan. Using the qualitative content analysis technique, the research attaches themes emerging from the analysed discourse of Baloch representatives from the news articles. Moreover, the article scrutinises each representative group’s understanding of how they perceive themselves and other representatives of the Baloch minority within the federation – in the context of the broader Baloch question. The research also aims to provoke thought within federalism theory: if representatives of an ethnic minority group show more allegiance to the federal centre than the minority they represent, is it a case of federal loyalty or ethnic disloyalty?
ISSN:2673-3145