Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan

Between 2009 and 2012, the Pakistani Supreme Court granted a range of rights to gender-nonconforming people, sometimes known as the khwaja sira, in a series of historic rulings. While the judiciary sought to regulate this population through legal and policy developments, community activists aimed to...

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Main Author: Faris A. Khan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud
Series:South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/samaj/5034
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author Faris A. Khan
author_facet Faris A. Khan
author_sort Faris A. Khan
collection DOAJ
description Between 2009 and 2012, the Pakistani Supreme Court granted a range of rights to gender-nonconforming people, sometimes known as the khwaja sira, in a series of historic rulings. While the judiciary sought to regulate this population through legal and policy developments, community activists aimed to change the public image of gender non-normative people through public advocacy. In this paper, I draw on James Scott’s theorizing on indigenous resistance to examine the practices of khwaja sira activists who sidestepped the trappings of dissent by anticipating potential pitfalls and avoiding any possibility of being accused of anti-Pakistan and anti-Islam activities. Instead, they employed forms of identification and refusal that not only impeded potential allegations of anti-nationalism but also complicated notions of dissent through engagement in modes of participation and resistance. I argue that underpinning this praxis is the khwaja sira desire for partial incorporation into the state, as citizens that are at once legally and culturally recognized and accepted, but also relatively self-governing and only partially intelligible within social and state spheres.
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spelling doaj.art-9075aec2829d47b6a3e8cec02be610672024-02-12T15:39:25ZengCentre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du SudSouth Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal1960-60602010.4000/samaj.5034Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in PakistanFaris A. KhanBetween 2009 and 2012, the Pakistani Supreme Court granted a range of rights to gender-nonconforming people, sometimes known as the khwaja sira, in a series of historic rulings. While the judiciary sought to regulate this population through legal and policy developments, community activists aimed to change the public image of gender non-normative people through public advocacy. In this paper, I draw on James Scott’s theorizing on indigenous resistance to examine the practices of khwaja sira activists who sidestepped the trappings of dissent by anticipating potential pitfalls and avoiding any possibility of being accused of anti-Pakistan and anti-Islam activities. Instead, they employed forms of identification and refusal that not only impeded potential allegations of anti-nationalism but also complicated notions of dissent through engagement in modes of participation and resistance. I argue that underpinning this praxis is the khwaja sira desire for partial incorporation into the state, as citizens that are at once legally and culturally recognized and accepted, but also relatively self-governing and only partially intelligible within social and state spheres.https://journals.openedition.org/samaj/5034stateresistancetransgenderhijraautonomyambiguity
spellingShingle Faris A. Khan
Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan
South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
state
resistance
transgender
hijra
autonomy
ambiguity
title Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan
title_full Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan
title_fullStr Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan
title_short Translucent Citizenship: Khwaja Sira Activism and Alternatives to Dissent in Pakistan
title_sort translucent citizenship khwaja sira activism and alternatives to dissent in pakistan
topic state
resistance
transgender
hijra
autonomy
ambiguity
url https://journals.openedition.org/samaj/5034
work_keys_str_mv AT farisakhan translucentcitizenshipkhwajasiraactivismandalternativestodissentinpakistan