Institute of Social and Policy Sciences explained

Institute of Social and Policy Sciences
Caption:I-SAPS Logo
Leader Title:Executive Director
Leader Name:Salman Humayun
Formation:2008
Type:Think Tank
Headquarters:Islamabad, Pakistan
Website:http://www.i-saps.org

The Institute of Social and Policy Sciences is a policy research and advocacy think tank with its headquarters located in Islamabad, Pakistan. The Institute also has offices in Lodhran and Mardan, Pakistan.

History

The Institute was founded in 2008 and is governed by its board of directors. The Institute works in the fields of education, health, disaster risk reduction, governance, conflict and stabilization. Institute of Social and Policy Sciences (I-SAPS) emerged from Consumer Rights Commission of Pakistan; a consumer rights advocate organization.

Since its inception, I-SAPS has undertaken initiatives to improve access and quality of education and ensuring children's right to free and compulsory education in Pakistan.[1] [2] In this relation, I-SAPS started reporting education budgets in Pakistan in 2007-08.[3] Each year, the Institute publishes its report on the state of education financing which analyzes the trends in education spending in Pakistan at Federal, provincial and district levels.[4] [5] [6] [7] The latest report in the series analyzed education budgets in Pakistan for a period of 2010-11 to 2015-16. I-SAPS has also facilitated the creation of Pakistan's National Caucus on Education with an aim to synergize the political and technical sides of education reforms in the country.[8]

Initiatives

In 2015, the Institute started working on adult literacy and has teamed up with Mobilink Foundation and GuarantCo for empowering the rural women in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan by providing them literacy skills.[9] The initiative is being implemented in eight districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa including Mardan, Swabi, Nowshera, Buner, Malakand, Haripur, Mansehra and Kohat.[10] [11]

For the last many years, the Institute has been advocating for compensation of civilian victims of conflict[12] and terrorism.[13] I-SAPS has also promoted the need of an effective disaster risk management framework in Pakistan[14] and has raised the issue of compensation of flood-affected communities on various forums.[15]

In 2011, I-SAPS launched the Journal of Social and Policy Sciences, a double-blind peer-review research journal.[16] [17] The Journal publishes multi-disciplinary policy-oriented research especially media and society, trade policy and tax reforms, post-colonial societal changes, education and health sector policies and reforms focusing mainly on Pakistan and South Asia.[18]

Since 2017, I-SAPS is implementing the "Sustainable Transition and Retention in Delivering Education (STRIDE)" program to address the transition and retention challenge for students at post-primary levels. STRIDE is being implemented in collaboration with the provincial governments of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in districts Bahawalpur, Kohat, Muzaffargarh and Swabi.[19]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Government urged to improve primary education in Pakistan. 1 April 2012. Dawn.
  2. Web site: Education policy: Free, universal education needs clearer definition. 30 March 2012. The Express Tribune.
  3. Web site: KP continues to increase spending on education. 15 July 2016. The Daily Times.
  4. Web site: Pakistan's education spending lowest in South Asia. 28 April 2016. Dawn.
  5. Web site: No improvement witnessed in utilisation of education budgets. 28 April 2016. The News International.
  6. Web site: Balochistan stands apart in education budget slashing spree. 28 April 2016. The Nation.
  7. Web site: Slow progress: Overall budget up but development allocation down - The Express Tribune. 27 April 2016. The Express Tribune.
  8. Web site: Lawmakers in Pakistan form education caucus. 5 June 2015. The Express Tribune.
  9. Web site: Innovative tool: Women educated through mobiles. 9 January 2016. The Express Tribune.
  10. Web site: بې تعلیمه میرمنې د ټیلفوني پیغامونو د لاری هم زدکړی کولی شي (I-SAPS Adult Female Literacy Programme coverage by Mashaal Radio (Pashto)). 23 June 2016. Mashaal Radio.
  11. Web site: SMS-based adult literacy enables learners to read, write. 30 May 2016. The Daily Times.
  12. Web site: Compensation for Conflict Victims. 5 September 2013. Dawn.
  13. Web site: Wounds of Conflict. 28 February 2012. Pakistan Today.
  14. Web site: Effective Disaster Risk Management Framework in Pakistan. 21 June 2011. Dawn.
  15. Web site: Compensation of Flood Affected Communities. ActionAid.
  16. Web site: Launch of Journal of Social and Policy Sciences. 27 April 2011. Dawn.
  17. Web site: News Coverage of Launch of Journal of Social and Policy Sciences. 1 May 2011. The News International.
  18. Web site: Journal of Social and Policy Sciences.
  19. Web site: STRIDE Launched in KP. 12 October 2017. The Express Tribune.