Agency Name: | Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services (PIPS) |
Nativename A: | Parliament of Pakistan |
Picture Width: | 100px |
Formed: | 15 December 2008 |
Headquarters: | Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory |
Minister1 Name: | Speaker National Assembly of Pakistan |
Chief1 Name: | Mr. Muhammad Anwar[2] |
Chief1 Position: | Executive Director of PIPS |
Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services (PIPS) (Urdu: {{nastaliq|ادارہَ پارلیمانی خدمات ، پاکستان) was established in December 2008 by the Parliament of Pakistan and is located in Islamabad.[3] پاکستانIn May 2012, Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Tara Sonenshine joined U.S. Ambassador Cameron Munter and National Assembly Speaker Dr. Fahmida Mirza, in Islamabad, to celebrate the opening of the Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Service (PIPS).[4] [5]
The Institute helps and trains the members of the Pakistan parliament and their staff in drafting bills and motions to be introduced in the Parliament of Pakistan. This institute was formed since many newly elected members of the parliament and their staff needed training in the Parliamentary procedures. The institute provides legislative research and for effective strong legislature in Pakistan.[6]
The Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services (PIPS) is an institution created to provide research and capacity building services for parliamentarians and parliamentary functionaries. The establishment of a sustainable institute for legislative research and capacity building has been a long-standing aspiration of parliamentarians and parliamentary staff in Pakistan. The establishment of the Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services, PIPS, through an Act of Parliament is a major step towards the realization of this objective.
PIPS ranked in top parliamentary research institutes (2023): The UK Parliament Office of Science and Technology, UK POST, has ranked the Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services (PIPS) in the Top Tier of only 41 most prized parliamentary research institutions out of 181 parliamentary institutions worldwide in 125 countries, viz a viz providing evidence-based policy synthesis, analysis and scrutiny as per the international standards to the elected parliamentarians of their respective countries. Dr Vicky Ward at the University of St Andrews in Scotland and Dr Mark Monaghan from University of Loughborough University in England, undertook a detailed comparative analysis of purpose, structure and performance over the five years (2018-2023) for globally 181 institutes to map 41 top institutes worldwide placing the Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services (PIPS), alongside network-oriented models such as the Commonwealth Parliamentary Research Services (CPRS) and UK-POST are placed among well-known models for linking individual Parliaments with academic research.
PIPS has been recognized as the global centre of excellence based on ensuring five qualitative standards of “impartial, balanced, credible, reliable and timely research services,” to individual members and parliamentary institutions in last five years. Research evidence has an important role to play in the work of parliaments as they scrutinise, debate and pass legislation. Some parliaments have well-known mechanisms for accessing and harnessing research from the academic community, but there are many others whose work is less well-known,” the study added.
The UK POST professors recognized that “PIPS has provided a record 1,500 research-based articles and technical assistance to the individual Members of Parliament, committees and cross-party caucuses” within the first decade of its establishment.” It is a proud moment for the National Parliament of Pakistan that PIPS has been rated in the Top Tier of global mapping of parliamentary mechanisms for accessing academic research in this worldwide rating. Speaker of the National Assembly of Pakistan Raja Pervaiz Ashraf is presently the President of the Board of Governors of PIPS. The global mapping undertook detailed study of all 192 national parliaments worldwide as well as well total of 173 potential mechanisms using parliamentary engagement and research networks (e.g. the European Parliamentary Technology Assessment Network, International Parliamentary Engagement Network) that enabled them to finally categorise mechanisms into three tiers. These represented level of confidence for best standard as (1 = high, 3 = low) viz a viz the institutions’ ability to provide high-quality academic research evidence that went beyond the provision of internally produced and/or unfiltered information and analysis. The map includes all mechanisms categorised as Tier 1 in which the Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services (PIPS) has been placed. To access the global map of top parliamentary research services anyone can visit: http://ipen-network.org/global-mapping/.”
References: https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/1078560-pips-ranked-amongst-top-parliamentary-research-institutes
Strategically placed in the aegis of the Parliament of Pakistan,
The Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services, PIPS, was formally established as an exclusive and independent, first of its kind research and capacity building facility for the parliamentarians, through an Act of Parliament on December 15, 2008. No matter it had started functioning in an interim facility since April 2006. The Parliament in Pakistan had remained deprived of the power of Knowledge that comes from timely, accurate and credible information and objective bipartisan analysis on the most sensitive of national matters till the establishment of PIPS. The intense need for such an institution was direly felt and expressed in 2005 in the Speakers Conference of the National and Provincial houses. The Legislative Development Steering Committee (LDSC) of the National Parliament under the chairmanship of Deputy Speaker National Assembly chose to work for setting up the institute with the support of the Pakistan Legislative Strengthening Project (PLSP). Based on the deliberations of the LDSC, comprising eight MNAs and four Senators in addition to Secretariat leadership of National Assembly and the Senate; various comparative studies and feasibility papers prepared by PLSP and the LDSC steered the initiative. The LDSC visualized PIPS as an autonomous entity, functioning under the leadership of the parliament and guided by a Board of Governors.
The members of two National Assemblies 2002 and 2008 and the Senate joined hands in not only envisioning the project but also steering it through legislation and across party advocacy. In fact PIPS legislation is a true manifestation of cross party caucusing in both the Senate and the National Assembly of Pakistan. The PIPS bill saw all parliamentary parties, government and the opposition working together. The bill was drafted by former Senator Ch Muhammad Anwer Bhinder from Pakistan Muslim League, (Quaid e Azam) PML Q, and ably supported by the former LDSC members such as former Deputy Speaker National Assembly Sardar Muhammad Yaqoub PML Q, Senator Ms Rukhsana Zuberi, Pakistan Peoples Party PPP, and Senator Azam Khan Swati JUI(F), Awami National Party ANP, respectively. Members of the 2008 LDSC, MNAs Dr Azra Fazal Pechuho, Deputy Speaker Mr Fasial Karim Kundi, Ms Yasmeen Rehman (all from PPP) and MNA Mr Ayaz Sadiq, Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) PML N, contributed to finally get it through in the 13th National Assembly as a consensus Act. We acknowledge that USAID PLSP founding Chief of Party Eleanor Valentine and two of her successors – Christopher Shields and Carmen Lane –actively assisted the parliament in general and the LDSC in particular to make PIPS a reality. The institute was thus officially created through a consensus Act of Parliament passed in December 2008.
The establishment of the PIPS through unanimous support of the Parliament reflected the will and vision of not only the National Assembly and Senate, but also of the provincial Houses of Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Balochistan, who are all represented through their Speakers in the PIPS Board of Governors. Under the Act, the Chairman Senate and Speaker National Assembly were charged with the responsibility of nominating the members of the founding BOG. Considering the importance of the institute and the role of the Board of Governors, they tried to pick up the best of the lot keeping in view their background and experience for taking up this onerous responsibility. The Board of Governors, chaired by Chairman Senate or Speaker National Assembly by three-year rotation, has the overall control of the Institute and it guides its functioning. Executive Director is the chief executive of the institute and works under the control of the Board. Speaker of the National Assembly Madam Fehmida Mirza became the founding President of the PIPS Board of Governors, who along with Deputy Chairman Senate, Senator Mir Jan Muhammad Khan Jamali inaugurated the official construction launch of PIPS building in June 2010. The Board, which thoroughly drafted, debated and approved comprehensive sets of Financial and Recruitment Rules that has laid a sound foundation to build a centre of excellence based on professionalism and merit, which reflects integrity and accountability in its functioning. The Board also appointed former Secretary General of National Assembly Mr Khan Ahmad Goraya as its founding executive director.
PIPS is committed to serve all national and provincial legislatures in their efforts to perform their onerous tasks of law making, executive oversight, policy making and representation according to the aspirations and will of the people of Pakistan and to strengthen the tradition of a democratic order in the country. According to the mandate of the Institute as mentioned in the PIPS Act, the functions of the institute are as follows:
1 | Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, Speaker, National Assembly of Pakistan | President | |
2 | Mirza Muhammad Afridi, Deputy Chairman, Senate of Pakistan | Vice President | |
3 | Mr. Murtaza Javed Abbasi, Minister for Parliamentary Affairs | Member | |
4 | Muhammad Sibtain Khan, Speaker, Provincial Assembly of Punjab | Member | |
5 | Agha Siraj Durrani, Speaker Provincial Assembly of Sindh | Member | |
6 | Mr. Mushtaq Ahmad Ghani, Speaker, Provincial Assembly of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | Member | |
7 | Mir Jan Muhammad Khan Jamali, Speaker, Provincial Assembly of Balochistan | Member | |
8 | Senator Kauda Babar | Member | |
9 | Senator Dilawar Khan | Member | |
10 | Senator Syed Muhammad Ali Shah Jamot | Member | |
11 | Senator Zarqa Suharwardy Taimur | Member | |
12 | Dr. Nisar Ahmad Cheema, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
13 | Chaudhry Mahmood Bashir Virk, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
14 | Mr. Khursheed Ahmed Junejo, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
15 | Ms. Wajiha Qamar, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
16 | Syed Ghulam Mustafa Shah, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
17 | Makhdoom Syed Sami Ul Hassan Gillani, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
18 | Ms. Marriyum Aurangzeb, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
19 | Engr. Sabir Hussain Kaim Khani, Member National Assembly of Pakistan | Member | |
Member | |||
20 | Mr. Mohammad Qasim Samad Khan, Secretary, Senate of Pakistan | Ex-officio-Member | |
21 | Mr. Tahir Hussain, Secretary, National Assembly | Ex-officio-Member | |
22 | Mr. Muhammad Anwar, Executive Director, PIPS | Ex-officio-Member |