Preface and acknowledgements
Calendar 1947
Punjab Administration till August 14, 1947
1: Introduction
2: A Theory of Ethnic Cleansing
3: Pre-Colonial and Colonial Punjab
4: Genesis of the Punjab Partition 1900-1944
Part I: The Punjab Bloodied, January 1945-March 31 1947
Introduction to Part I
5: Punjab Elections and Coalition Government
6: Direct Action: January 24 - February 26, 1947
7: The March Riots: Lahore
8: The March Riots: Amritsar and Jullundur
9: The March Riots: Multan
10: The March Riots: Rawalpindi and adjoining rural areas
Part II: The Partition End Game: April 1 - August 14, 1947
Introduction to Part II
11: British Policy on the Partition of the Punjab, April 1 - June
30, 1947
12: The Battle for Lahore and Amritsar: April 1 - June 30, 1947
13: Partition Machinery and Proceedings: July 1 - August 14,
1947
14: The Punjab Disintegrates: July 1 - August 14, 1947
Part III: Ethnic Cleansing: August 15 - December 31, 1947
Introduction to Part III
Exodus from West Punjab
15: Lahore Division
16: Rawalpindi Division
17: Multan Division and Bahawalpur State
Exodus from East Punjab and Princely States
18: Amritsar and three Tahsils of Gurdaspur
19: Jullundur Division
20: Ambala Division
21: Eastern Punjab Princely States
22: Analysis and Conclusions
List of Members of Punjab Legislative Assembly till July 4,
1947
Maps
Bibliography
Index
Ishtiaq Ahmed was born in Lahore on 24 February 1947. He received a
PhD in Political Science from Stockholm University in 1986. He
taught at Stockholm University from 1987 to 2007, and was then
invited as Senior Research Fellow and Visiting Research Professor
by the Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of
Singapore during 2007-2010. He took early retirement and is now
Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Stockholm University and
Honorary Senior
Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of
Singapore. He has published extensively on Pakistani and South
Asian politics. His research interests cover as diverse fields
as
political Islam, ethnicity and nationalism, human and minority
rights, and indeed partition studies.
Admirably, Ahmed treats the ordinary people of all three communities in the Punjab conflict with equal empathy and compassion.
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