Inayat Ali is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Fatima Jinnah Women University (FJWU), Rawalpindi, Pakistan. He also serves as Adjunct Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Shifa Tameer-e-Milat University, Islamabad, Pakistan and a Research Fellow in the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Vienna, Austria. And he served as Founding Incharge of the Department of Public Health & Allied Sciences, FJWU, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
""This fascinating book, based on detailed anthropological research and informed by cultural theory, shines a light on of the COVID-19 pandemic as it has unfolded in Pakistan. It demonstrates how lived experiences are refracted through cultural norms and the specific socioeconomic and political contexts of each nation and region."" - Professor Deborah Lupton, Centre for Social Research in Health, University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney “This excellent book offers timely and deep insights into the experience of how a deeply ideologically divided nation understood and dealt with the pandemic. Constructing the Pandemic in Pakistan is a convincing call to action, advocating for evidence-based, inclusive, and equitable responses to public health crises worldwide.” - Dr. Sadiq Bhanbhro, Senior Research Fellow, Sheffield Hallam University, UK “On the basis of first class ethnography Inayat Ali provides the reader with a vivid picture of the dynamics of the infection, the myths and narratives surrounding it, the governmental responses and the subsequent vaccination programs. His analysis involves a wide range of theoretical insights and includes important debates that have not been covered in the research on COVID-19 so far. An important book for both anthropologists as well as practitioners and anyone interested in South Asian studies.” - Professor Gabriele Alex, University of Tübingen, Germany