Situated in Lahore, Pakistan, the Civil Services Academy Lahore is an academy for training the young bureaucrats of the country who are commissioned by the Federal Public Service Commission (FPSC) through a very competitive and tough exam known as Central superior services exam abbreviated as "CSS", (Urdu: لاہوراکادمی برائے تربیتِ دیوانی ملازمین) was established in 1948 (on the advice of first governor general of Pakistan Mr.Muhammad Ali jinnah) for the training of fresh entrants to the Bureaucracy of Pakistan Central superior services and was originally called Pakistan Administrative Services Academy.[1][2][3]
With the adoption of Civil Services Pakistan Resolution, the Academy was renamed as Civil Services Academy and the campus was shifted from an old building on the Race Course Road to the Old Residency Estate on Mall Road. Meanwhile, in addition to the new recruits of Civil Services of Pakistan (CSP), the academy started training the new employees of Foreign Services of Pakistan in 1963. After the creation of Bangladesh in 1971 and the consequent loss of the Police Academy of Pakistan (then situated at Rajshahi in Bangladesh), the new recruits of Police Service of Pakistan (PSP) also started training in this academy.[4]
With the adoption of Administrative Reforms of 1973, it was decided to organize a Common Training Program (CTP) for fresh entrants to various Central Superior Services (renamed as Occupational Groups).[2]
As a consequence the Civil Services Academy and Finance Services Academy (FSA) were merged. This Financial Services Academy was set up by the Government of Pakistan in mid 1950s for the training of new entrants of various Financial Services such as Pakistan Taxation Services (PTS), Pakistan Customs and Excise Services (PCES), Pakistan Military Accounts Service (PMAS), Pakistan Audit and Accounts Service (PAAS), and Pakistan Railway's Accounts Service (PRAS). The huge campus of Financial Services Academy was located at Walton, which was then a sparsely populated suburb of Lahore. This new entity, created out of this merger, was renamed as Academy for Administrative Training. However, this name was once again changed to Civil Services Academy by the then President of Pakistan during his visit to the Academy in 1981.[4]
The academy has one campus at Walton (used exclusively for the Common Training Program) and another one at Mall Road (which is used for the Specialized Training Programme for Pakistan Administrative Service officers).[2][3]
Previously the academy was a subordinate office and attached department of Establishment Division, Government of Pakistan but now it is an autonomous body. It now stands merged along with the four NIPAs (National Institute of Public Administration) and the PASC (Pakistan Administrative Staff College) into the National School of Public Policy (NSPP). The President of Pakistan is the chairman of the board of NSPP.
The administration of the academy is run by a director general who is usually a senior civil servant.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Politicians must serve public: Punjab governor The News International (newspaper), Published 23 December 2017, Retrieved 3 July 2018
- ^ a b c Civil Services Academy profile on National School of Public Policy website Retrieved 3 July 2018
- ^ a b Civil Services Academy trainees call on acting IGP The Nation (newspaper), Published 29 December 2017, Retrieved 3 July 2018
- ^ a b History of Civil Services Pakistan Central Superior Services of Pakistan forum, Retrieved 3 July 2018