Advocacy and Litigation for Death Penalty Reform Strategies and Challenges in Pakistan and Beyond
Keywords:
Reform Of Death Penalty, Campaign, Litigation, Pakistan, Human Rights.Abstract
This article analyzes the strategies and challenges of using advocacy and litigation to reform the death penalty, focusing on the complex socio-legal context of Pakistan. The research employs a qualitative methodology, examining national legislation, pivotal court judgments, reports from human rights organizations, and comparative international frameworks. The findings demonstrate that public advocacy campaigns have been crucial in raising awareness and stimulating national debate on the issue. Concurrently, strategic litigation has successfully challenged systemic flaws, such as unfair trials and the application of the death penalty to vulnerable groups, pushing for enhanced procedural safeguards. However, significant impediments to abolition persist, including strong public support for capital punishment, a lack of political will for reform, and profound institutional weaknesses within the broader justice system. The study concludes that achieving meaningful and sustainable reform necessitates an integrated, dual approach that synergistically combines sustained advocacy to shift public opinion and build political capital with targeted litigation to compel judicial accountability and legal change. This effort requires long-term commitment, international cooperation, and context-specific solutions to align Pakistan’s practices with evolving global human rights standards.


