Islamabad, Pakistan's capital city, was planned in 1960 by Greek architect Constantinos Doxiadis as a model of rational order and national identity. Six decades later, the city faces multiple, deeply connected urban insecurities. This paper introduces a thread-and-knot conceptual framework, drawn from architectural design thinking, to analyse how eight interconnected insecurities — an imposed planning grid on an ancient landscape, governance failure and elite capture, rural-to-urban migration and cultural collision, informal settlements and spatial inequality, Afghan refugee displacement and securitisation, climate vulnerability and destruction of the Margalla Hills, sectarian violence culminating in the February 2026 Imambargah attack, and the collapse of genuine public space — are woven together into a tightening system of urban dysfunction. Each insecurity forms a knot on a single thread; every new knot tightens the ones before it. The framework further argues that psychological insecurity — fear, exclusion, shame, and loss of belonging — accompanies every physical manifestation and cannot be separated from it. Drawing entirely on secondary data including peer-reviewed research, international organisation reports, and institutional documents, the paper proposes a structured pluralism framework as a pathway toward resolution: designated dignified zones for Afghan refugees, regularisation of informal settlements, transitional housing for migrant workers, and genuinely inclusive public spaces as democratic anchors connecting all parts of the city. The paper concludes that Islamabad's knots cannot all be untied at once, but they can be loosened — carefully, humanely, and equitably — so that the capital city begins to function as a shared space for all who live within it.
Naila Waheed (Mon,) studied this question.