RESUME

DR. SYED RIFAAT HUSSAIN

Professor and Chairman,

Department of Defence and Strategic Studies

Quaid-i-Azam University,

Islamabad, Pakistan.

Internet:

Education

University of Denver

Ph.D. (International Studies)

M.A. (International Studies)

.

Quaid-i-Azam University

M.Sc. (International Relations)

Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad. Pakistan.

Punjab University

B.A. (Political Science)

Professional Experience

·  Professor and Chair, (December 1, 2008)

Department of Defence and Strategic Studies

Quaid-i-Azam University,

Islamabad, Pakistan

·  Professor and Chair, (August 2008 –November 2008) Department of Peace and Conflict Studies,

National Defense University,

Islamabad, Pakistan

·  Executive Director,

Regional Center for Strategic Studies (RCSS) (August 2005-August2008)

Colombo, Sri Lanka

·  Director General and Senior Research Fellow,

National Defence College, Islamabad. (March 2004 - August 2005)

·  Professor and Chairman,

Department of Defence and Strategic Studies, (August 2003-February 2005)

Quaid-I-Azam University, Islamabad. Pakistan

·  Visiting Faculty, Center for International Security

And Cooperation, (CISAC) Stanford University,

Stanford, California, USA (2002-2003)

·  Visiting Professor, Department of Political Science,

Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA (Fall Quarter 2002)

·  Associate Professor and Chair (1999 to 2002)

Department of Defence and Strategic Studies,

Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad

·  Course Director, Foreign Service Academy

Ministry of Foreign Affairs Islamabad

·  Associate Professor, (1997-1999)

Department of International Relations,

Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.

·  Course Director, Foreign Service Academy

Ministry of Foreign Affairs Islamabad

·  Minister (Information) (1994-1997)

Embassy of Pakistan, Washington, D.C.

·  Assistant Professor, (1988-1993)

Department of International Relations

Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.

·  Course Director, Foreign Service Academy

Ministry of Foreign Affairs Islamabad

·  Lecturer, (1976-1987)

Department of International Relations

Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.

·  Research Fellow (1975-1976)

Department of International Relations

Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.

Courses Taught:

Stanford University:
1. South Asian Security Issues (Undergraduate and Graduate levels)

Quaid-I-Azam University: (All Graduate Level)

1.  Basic Factors and Principles of IR

2.  Theories of IR

3.  Foreign Policy Analysis

4.  Pakistan’s Foreign Policy

5.  Contemporary Strategy

6.  Foreign Policies of the Great Powers with special reference to South Asia

7.  Issues in Arms Control and Disarmament

8.  Evolution of Modern Strategy

9.  Dynamics of Nuclear Proliferation

10.  International Relations since 1945

11.  Contemporary Strategic Issues: Terrorism

12.  Crisis Management

13.  Conflict Resolution: Theory and Practice

14.  Democracy, Human Rights and Conflict

Foreign Service Academy (Islamabad)

1.  Introduction to International Politics

2.  Strategic Analysis and Issues

3.  Pakistan’s Foreign Policy

Fatima Jinnah University (Rawalpindi)

1. Contemporary Foreign Policy Analysis

2. International Peace and Conflict Resolution

National University of Modern Languages

1. Post-Modernism and Structuralism in IR

Publications:

Books and Monographs:

1.  (Co-author), The 2008 Mumbai Terrorist Attacks: Strategic Fallout, RSIS Monograph No. 17 (Singapore: RSIS, Nanyang Technological University, 2009)

2.  (Co-author), Afghanistan and 9/11: The Anatomy of a Conflict (New Delhi: Roli Books, 2002).

3.  From Dependence to Intervention: Soviet-Afghan Relations During the Brezhnev Era (1964-1982) (Ann Arbor, MI: U.M.I, 1994).

4.  (Co-Editor), Pakistan’s Foreign Policy: A Reader 2 Volumes (Rawalpindi: Feroz Sons, 1988).

5.  (Co-author), Pakistan’s Foreign Policy: A Research Guide (Rawalpindi: Feroz Sons, 1988).

Articles and Chapters in Books (Published Abroad):

  1. “The India Factor,” in Maleeha Lodhi, ed. Pakistan: Beyond the Crisis State (London: Hurst and Company, 2011): 319-347.
  2. “Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE): Failed Quest for a “Homeland,” in Klejda Mulaj, ed. Violent Non-State Actors in World Politics (London: Hurst and Company, 2010): 381-412.
  3. “Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE): An Elusive Quest for a “homeland” Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies Vol. XXX1, No. 3 (Spring 2008): 68-97.
  4. “Pakistan’s Changing Outlook on Kashmir,” South Asian Survey Vol. 14, No. 2 (July-December 2007): 195-205.
  5. “Security and Terrorism in South Asia with special reference to Pakistan and Afghanistan,” The Journal of International Security (Tokyo) Vol. 35, No. 2 (September 2007): 35-55.
  6. “Responding to terrorist threat: Perspectives from Saudi Arabia and Pakistan,” Gulf Year Book, 2006 (Dubai: The Gulf Research Centre, 2007): 317-334.
  7. “Responding to terrorist threat: Perspectives from Saudi Arabia and Pakistan,” Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies Vol. XXX, No. 3 (Spring 2007):38-61.
  8. “Deterrence and Nuclear Use: Doctrines in South Asia,” in E. Sridharan, ed. The India-Pakistan Nuclear Relationship:Theories of Deterrence and International Relations (London and New Delhi: Rout ledge: 2007): 151-184.
  9. “The India-Pakistan Peace Process,” Defence and Security Analysis Vol. 22, No. 4

(December 2006): 94-110.

  1. “The Islamist/Fundamentalist Threat: Differing Perceptions and Strategies of US and Europe,” in V.P. Malik and Jorg Schultz, eds. Emerging NATO: Challenges for Asia and Europe (New Delhi: Lancer Publishers, 2006): 29-53.
  2. “Changing security trends in South Asia: Implications for the Gulf Region,” in Abdulaziz Sager, ed. Dynamic Alliances: Strengthening Ties Between GCC and Asia (Dubai: Gulf Research Centre, 2006): 77-98.
  3. “Changing Dynamics of Relations between South Asia and the Gulf Region,” Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (Spring 2006): 16-35.
  4. “Nuclear Doctrines in South Asia,” SASSU Research Paper No. 4 (Bradford: Department of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, December 2005): 1-34.
  5. “Analyzing strategic stability in South Asia with pathways and prescriptions for avoiding nuclear war,” Contemporary South Asia, Vol. 14, no. 2 (June 2005): 141-153.
  6. “Pakistan’s Relations with Azad Kashmir and the impact on Indo-Pakistani Relations,” in Rafiq Dossani and Henry S. Rowen, eds. Prospects for Peace in South Asia (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005): 109-140.
  7. “Missile Race in South Asia: the way forward,” South Asian Survey Vol. 11, No. 2 (July/December 2004): 273-286.
  8. “Missile race in South Asia,” South Asian Journal (January-March 2004): 72-84
  9. “Pakistan’s Security Policy in the 1990s with Special Reference to Relations with India, China and Central Asia,” in Nobuko Nagasaki, ed. The Nation-State and Transnational Forces in South Asia: Research Project: Institutions, Network and Forces of Changes in Contemporary South Asia (Tokyo: Japanese Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture, 2001): 213-240.
  10. “Democratic Transitions and the Role of Islam in Asia: Perspective from Pakistan,” in Douglas E. Ramage, ed. Asian Perspectives Seminar: Democratic Transitions and the Role of Islam in Asia, October 18, 2000 (Washington, D.C.: 2000): 13-29.
  11. “Pakistan and Central Asia,” Central Asia (Sweden), No. 2. (8) 1997: 67-76.
  12. “Pakistan and Central Asia,” in David O. Smith, ed. From Containment to Stability: Pakistan United States Relations in the Post-Cold War Era (Washington, D.C.: National Defense University, 1993): 191-216.
  13. “The Political Economy of Pakistan’s Relations with Central Asia with special reference to ECO” Iranian Journal of International Affairs (July/August 1992): 234-253.
  14. “The Superpower and Major Power Rivalry in South Asia: The United States, the Soviet Union, India and China” in Lawrence Ziring and David G. Dickson, eds. Asian Security Issues: National Systems and International Relations (Kalamazoo: Department of Government, Michigan University, 1988): 143-163.
  15. “Pakistan-American Relations in Soviet Perspective: An Evaluation” in Leo Rose and Kamal Matinuddin, eds. Beyond Afghanistan: The Emerging U.S.-Pakistan Relations (Berkeley: University of California, 1989): 302-326.

Articles in refereed Pakistani Journals and Chapters in Books:

  1. “Resolving the Kashmir Dispute: Blending Realism with Justice,” The Pakistan Development Review, 48: 4 Part II (Winter 2009): 1007-1035
  2. “Azad Kashmir as a Factor in India-Pakistan Relations,” in Syed Farooq Hasnat and Ahmed Faruqui, eds. Pakistan: Unresolved Issues of State and Society (Islamabad: Vanguard Books, 2008): 285-305.
  3. “India-Pakistan Peace Process: military and political dimensions,” Prospects of Peace, Stability and Prosperity in South Asia (Islamabad: Institute of Regional Studies, 2005): 41-62
  4. “Proposals for Resolving the Kashmir Dispute,” PILDAT BRIEFING PAPER, No. 19 (June 2005):1-52.
  5. “Changing Trends in Arms Purchases and their Implications for Developing Countries,” National Development and Security, vol. X111, No. 2 (Winter 2005): 9-30.
  6. “Available solutions and proposals for resolving the Kashmir Dispute,” National Development and Security (Spring 2004): 1-32.
  7. “Indo-US Ties: Implications for Pakistan,” MARGALLA PAPERS (2004):114-133.
  8. “War Against Terrorism: A Pakistani Perspective,” IPRI Journal (Winter 2004): 30-48.
  9. “Pakistan’s relations with Azad Kashmir,” Regional Studies Vol. XXI, No. 4 (Autumn 2003): 82-97.
  10. “Pakistan’s relations with Afghanistan: Continuity and Change, Strategic Studies (Winter 2002): 43-75.
  11. “Thinking about Nuclear Use and “No First Use”, National Development and Security, (Winter 2001/02): 1-14.
  12. “Politics of Terrorism and Global Implications,” MARGALLA PAPERS 2001: International Terrorism (Islamabad: National Defence College, 2001): 31-45.
  13. “Prospects for Peace between India and Pakistan,” National Development and Security (Spring 2001): 1-14.
  14. “SAARC as a Vehicle for Peace in South Asia,” in Dr. S.M. Rahman, ed. SAARC in the New Millennium (Rawalpindi: Foundation for Research on International Environment, National Development and Security, 2001): 191-200.
  15. “Foundations of Conflict Resolution,” in Moonis Ahmar and Farhan Hanif Siddiqi, eds. The Challenges of Conflict Resolution and Security in 21st Century: Problems and Prospects (Karachi: Department of International Relations, University of Karachi, 2001): 6-12.
  16. “The Imperative of Dialogue among Civilizations,” National Development and Security (Summer 2000): 23-30.
  17. “International Response to South Asia’s Nuclearization,” Strategic Issues (March 2000): 12-22.
  18. “Nuclear Command/Control and Deterrence Stability,” Strategic Issues (March 2000): 98-109
  19. “Pakistan and Central Asia” in Ijaz Khan and Nasreen Ghufran, eds. Pakistan’s Foreign Policy Regional Perspective: A Critique (Peshawar: Department of International Relations, Peshawar University, 1999): 81-91.
  20. “Quaid-I-Azam and Pakistan’s Foreign Policy,” in Dr. Riaz Ahmad, ed. Pakistani Scholars on Quaid-I-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah (Islamabad, Quaid-I-Azam University Islamabad, 1999): 400-409.
  21. “India-Pakistan Ties: A Cooperative Security Framework,” in Saeed Shafqat, ed. Contemporary Issues in Pakistan Studies (Lahore: Azad Enterprises, 1998): 179-187.
  22. “Moving Towards Peace in the Middle East” Strategic Studies (Spring/Summer 1993): 38-51.
  23. “Ideology versus Pragmatism: China’s Response to the New World Order” Strategic Studies (Autumn 1992): 41-61.
  24. “The Future of Non-Aligned Movement and Its Implications for Pakistan” Strategic Studies (Summer 1992): 43-52.
  25. “The Ashkabad Summit,” Strategic Perspectives No. 3 (1992): 47-53.
  26. “Quaid-I-Azam and Pakistan’s Foreign Policy” Pakistan Journal of History and Culture (Winter 1991):138-147.
  27. “China: Keeping the socialist faith,” Strategic Perspectives No. 2 (Autumn 1991): 28-34.
  28. “The Soviet Response to the Pakistan Resolution: An Evaluation” in Kaneez F. Yousaf, ed. The Pakistan Movement Revisited (Islamabad: National Institute of Historical and Cultural Research, 1990): 531-545.
  29. “American Intervention in the Middle East: Case Study of Lebanon, 1958” Strategic Studies (Spring 1990): 72-92.
  30. “Superpower Intervention in the Middle East: A Case Study of the U.S. Intervention in Syria, 1957” Strategic Studies (Summer 1989): 38-57.
  31. “The Political Economy of Soviet-Afghan Relations in the Brezhnev Era” Strategic Studies (Spring 1988): 47-60.
  32. “Superpower and Major Power Rivalry in South Asia: U.S., U.S.S.R, China and India” Strategic Studies (Autumn 1988): 16-37.
  33. “Soviet-Afghan Relations, 1919-1947” Journal of Central Asia (December 1987): 193-208.
  34. “Pak-Soviet Relations since 1947: A Dissenting Appraisal” Strategic Studies (Spring 1987): 64-88.
  35. “Lenin and Materialist Epistemology” Journal of European Studies (Summer 1986): 21-42.
  36. “Superpower Rivalry and the World System Theory” Pakistan Journal of American Studies (September 1986): 32-57.
  37. “Pak-Soviet Relations: An Appraisal” Pakistan Journal of Social Sciences (1985-1986): 75-96.
  38. “Modernization, Forces of Production and Class Struggle: Alternative Perspectives on Socialist Construction in the Developing Countries” Journal of European Studies (Spring 1985): 97-123.
  39. “A Dependency Perspective on Soviet-Afghan Relations in the Brezhnev Era” Regional Studies (Spring 1985): 38-51.
  40. “Soviet Intervention: Case of Strategic Surprise or the US Inaction in Afghanistan” Regional Studies (1983):.28-33.
  41. “Values and Facts in Social Science: A Critique of Logical Positivism” Pakistan Journal of Social Sciences (December 1983): 24-37.
  42. “The World Order Model Project: An Evaluation” Pakistan Journal of Social Sciences (July-August 1980): 76-92.
  43. “Soviet-American Détente: Theory and Reality” Strategic Studies (December 1977): 22-42.
Affiliations and Awards

·  Central Overseas Training Scholarship Ministry of Education, Government of Pakistan, 1980-1984.

·  John Allen Fellowship, Graduate School of International Studies, University of Denver, Denver, Colorado. U.S.A. 1981-1982.

·  Pre-doctoral Fellowship, Centre for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University, Stanford, CA U.S.A. 1983-1984.

·  Research Fellow, Superpower Intervention Project, Graduate School of International Studies, University of Denver, Denver, Colorado U.S.A. 1988

·  Research Fellow, Henry L. Stimson Centre, Washington, D.C. U.S.A. 1992.

·  Deputy Editor, Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad, Islamabad. Pakistan. 1993.

·  Member Editorial Board, South Asia Journal, Australia

·  Member Editorial Board, Margalla Papers, National Defence College, Islamabad. College, Islamabad.

·  Member, International Advisory Board, Regional Studies Quarterly

·  Member, Editorial Board, National Defence College Journal, Islamabad.

·  Member National Slavic Honor Society, University of Denver Chapter.

·  Member Board of Governors, Pakistan Studies Centre, University of Karachi. Pakistan

·  Member, IISS, London.

·  Member, International Steering Group, Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflict (GPPAC), Netherlands.

·  Member, International Research Committee, Regional Centre for Strategic Studies, Colombo, Sri Lanka

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