BEYOND THE THIRD GENDER: INVESTIGATING THE SOCIO-CULTURAL BARRIERS TO INCLUSION FOR TRANSGENDERS IN CONTEMPORARY PAKISTAN

Authors

  • Gulab Khan Lecturer, Department of Humanities, Lasbela University of Agriculture, Water & Marine Sciences (LUAWMS) Uthal, Balochistan Pakistan.
  • Dr. Amdadullah Baloch (corresponding author) Associate Professor, Department of Economics, Lasbela University of Agriculture, Water & Marine Sciences (LUAWMS) Uthal, Balochistan, Pakistan.
  • Dr. Jalal Faiz Director General (DG), Benazir Income Support Programme, Balochistan, Pakistan.
  • Nawaz Ahmed Lecturer, Department of Political Science, University of Turbat, Balochistan, Pakistan
  • Somaiya Rasheed Lecturer, Department of Economics, Lasbela University of Agriculture, Water & Marine Sciences (LUAWMS) Uthal, Balochistan, Pakistan
  • Habiba Mushtaq Lecturer, Political Science Govt Sardar Hasan Musa Girls Degree Collage, Quetta Balochistan, Pakistan
  • Riaz Ahmed Lecturer, Department of English Language and linguistics, Lasbela University of Agriculture, Water & Marine Sciences (LUAWMS) Uthal, Balochistan, Pakistan.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63878/cjssr.v4i1.2249

Abstract

This study investigates the sociocultural challenges faced by transgender, Hijra, and Khawaja Sira individuals in Pakistan. The existing studies, the analysis identifies a persistent and interlocking system of stigma, discrimination, and structural exclusion that shapes transgender lives across the life course. Findings reveal that social rejection begins within the family and is reinforced by hostile school environments, limited access to education, and the absence of institutional safeguards. These early experiences of marginalization extend into adulthood through discriminatory healthcare practices, widespread violence, police harassment, and systemic denial of legal protections. The study demonstrates that healthcare settings are among the most stigmatizing environments, contributing to severe mental health vulnerabilities, including depression, anxiety, and suicidality. Economic exclusion further constrains life opportunities, forcing many transgender individuals into precarious informal work due to limited employment options and institutional bias. Although Pakistan has enacted progressive legislation, including the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2018, a significant implementation gap persists, undermining the law’s transformative potential. Despite these challenges, community structures such as the guru chela system offer important sources of cultural identity, belonging, and resilience. Overall, the study concludes that transgender marginalization in Pakistan is structural rather than incidental, requiring multi sectoral reforms across education, healthcare, policing, legal institutions, and public discourse. Meaningful inclusion will depend on coordinated, culturally grounded policies that address the root causes of stigma while strengthening institutional accountability and protecting the dignity and rights of transgender citizens.

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Published

2025-12-28

How to Cite

BEYOND THE THIRD GENDER: INVESTIGATING THE SOCIO-CULTURAL BARRIERS TO INCLUSION FOR TRANSGENDERS IN CONTEMPORARY PAKISTAN. (2025). Contemporary Journal of Social Science Review, 3(4), 1885-1898. https://doi.org/10.63878/cjssr.v4i1.2249