U.S. Embassy Islamabad and Quaid-i-Azam University Host 16th American Studies Conference
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad, September
16 , 2022: The Area Studies Centre for Africa, North and South America at
Quaid-i-Azam University and the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad co-hosted a two-day
conference on “Seventy-Five Years of U.S.-Pakistan
Relations.” The purpose of the conference was to commemorate
the 75 years of bilateral ties between the two countries. Conference
participants discussed ways to deepen and expand bilateral ties between the
United States and Pakistan by exploring new avenues of cooperation in the
fields of trade and commerce, climate change, energy, and educational exchanges.
The Vice Chancellor of Quaid-i-Azam
University, Professor Dr Muhammad Ali, expressed appreciation for the
university’s ongoing collaboration with the U.S. Embassy, and lauded the
efforts of all those involved with organizing the 16th American Studies Conference, which has gathered
distinguished Pakistani and American scholars for in-depth discussions about
the bilateral relationship. He further stated, “the conference was a
timely initiative by the Area Study Centre and the American Embassy in
Islamabad, as the bilateral relations between our two countries are undergoing
a transformation and adjusting to the evolving global realities where human
security is becoming a focal point of international interactions.”
U.S. Ambassador Donald Blome added, “It is a
great honor to partner with Quaid-i-Azam University to promote the discipline
of American Studies and discuss the 75 years of bilateral relations between our
countries. Over the decades, the U.S. and Pakistan have built a broad,
strong partnership around mutual support, economic ties, and people-to-people
connections.”
The Chief Guest at the occasion, Rana Tanveer
Hussain, Federal Minister Training further acknowledged the efforts of the U.S.
government in promoting academic excellence for Pakistanis and also emphasized
the importance of educational exchanges, adding “The Fulbright program is
already contributing significantly towards providing opportunities to women and
young people.” However, he added, the United States and Pakistan “need to
explore other ways of mutual corporation.”
Special guest, Senator Mushahid Hussain stated, “I am very happy
we are moving beyond the narrow security driven policies that have shaped our
relationship in the past couple of decades, to a more broad-based
people-to-people relationship in which education is going to be the
centerpiece.”
Scholars and experts from both the U.S. and
Pakistan attended the conference, which included special sessions, plenary
sessions, and two working groups to discuss diverse issues such as bilateral
trade relations; educational exchanges; and the role of youth, women
entrepreneurs and the diaspora in strengthening the bilateral ties between the
two countries. In addition to the students and faculty of Quaid-i-Azam
University, representatives from various research think tanks, the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Trade and Commerce and the Ministry of Climate
Change also participated in the conference.
Dr. Sadia Sulaiman, the Director of the Area
Studies Centre for Africa, North, and South America and the conference
organizer, led the concluding session in which speakers presented the potential
future trajectory of U.S.-Pakistan relations. Dr. Muhammad Ali, Vice
Chancellor of Quaid-i-Azam University and U.S. Embassy Deputy Counselor for
Public Affairs Jacqueline Deley delivered closing remarks.
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