Female Police Officers in Pakistan: Diverse Realities, Continuities and Change
By (Author) Sadaf Ahmad
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
30th October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Pakistans police have historically displayed significant apathy towards recruiting women, considering them unsuitable for this profession
. The social stigma of working in a notorious, male-dominated organization has also prevented many women from joining in the past. Today, female police officers comprise just over 3% of the Pakistani police. This book is the first to examine their experiences within it. It draws on extensive ethnographic research on female police officers of all ranks in cities across Pakistan to illustrate the diversity of their recruitment, roles, experiences, and career prospects across rank, cadre, and region. It also demonstrates how female officers are combatting patriarchal challenges to make greater inroads into a masculine terrain, taking on diverse roles, and playing an increasingly important role in supporting womens access to justice, and why these changes cannot be conflated with the idea that these will automatically and radically transform the organization itself.
This is an important work, the kind that advances our understanding of changing gendered power relations, womens agency, and social transformations occurring throughout Pakistan. It addresses the important issue of policing which has been shrouded in controversy due to the fears most women have of going to a police station. Ahmed deftly addresses the impact of the introduction of female police officers and female police stations and the actual multi-faceted impacts they have had on both society and on the lives of the women police officers themselves. -- Anita M. Weiss, Professor Emerita, University of Oregon, US; author of Interpreting Islam, Modernity and Womens Rights in Pakistan Rights in Pakistan
Sadaf Ahmad is Associate Professor of Anthropology in the Mushtaq Ahmad Gurmani School of Humanities and Social Sciences at LUMS, Lahore, Pakistan. She completed her PhD in Cultural Anthropology at Syracuse University in the USA and is the author of Transforming Faith: A Story of Al-Huda and Islamic Revivalism Among Urban Pakistani Women.