Abstract
Police station is the basic organizational and functional unit of police working. From a citizen’s perspective, it is the gateway to criminal justice system. Legally, it is defined in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 as a provincially declared entity. The abstraction of this legal concept is deep rooted in discourse of police reforms that take into account police station reforms as part of larger justice sector reforms’ project. Most of the analyses of police culture revolve in and around police stations. Historically, police stations were envisaged territorially and were designed to cater to rural policing. Later on, alongside the territorial conception of police stations, functional conception also emerged leading to establishment of subject specific police stations like women police stations, counter-terrorism department’s police stations and excise related police stations. The territorial police stations, however, remained most prominent as the legal framework of criminal justice system is more bespoke to them as compared to functional police stations. Owing to the pivotal position of police stations within criminal justice system, a dedicated Police Station Enquiry Committee (M. A. K Chaudhry Report) was undertaken in 1976. In addition, keeping in view the statistical value of police stations in economic planning, the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) recorded total number of police stations in the country. The PBS count shows Punjab having 705 (factually 720), Sindhhaving566, KP having 281, Baluchistan having 125 and ICT having 22 Police Stations.

Kamran Adil. (2020) Implementing Police Station Based Budgeting in Pakistan, Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Volume-12, Issue-3.
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