ABSTRACT

First published in 1980, this groundbreaking Routledge Revival is a reissue of an original and authentic anthropological account of Pukhtun society by Professor Akbar Ahmed. Combining extensive fieldwork data collected among the Mohmand tribe in the Northwest Frontier Province of Pakistan with historical and literary sources, Professor Ahmed’s study seeks to construct an ideal-type model of Pukhtun society based on the ideal Code of the Pukhtuns and to analyse the conditions of its maintenance and transformation.

The author’s thesis is that this ideal model exists within Pukhtun society when interaction with larger state systems is minimal and in poor economic zones. In this way he posits an opposition between the Tribal Agencies along the border with Afghanistan, where ecological conditions are poor and state influence minimal, and the Settled Areas under state administration where Pukhtun society is forced away from its ideals.

part 1|78 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|32 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|22 pages

Tribal society and the historical process

part 2|225 pages

Tribal models

chapter 5|34 pages

Lineage and leadership organization

Alliance and conflict

chapter 6|21 pages

Non-Pukhtun groups

Patron and client relationships

chapter 7|32 pages

Pukhto paradigm

chapter 8|46 pages

Settlement and domestic structure

chapter 9|45 pages

Economic structure and lineage ideology

part 3|58 pages

Encapsulating systems, economic development and tribal strategy

chapter 10|30 pages

Encapsulating systems and tribal strategy

chapter 11|19 pages

Economic development and encapsulation

chapter 12|7 pages

Conclusion