Nasir Razzaq is a Pakistani linguist, author, academic leader, and scholarly infrastructure architect whose work sits at the intersection of language, identity, interdisciplinary scholarship, and scholarly ecosystems. As Founding Director and CEO of the Xpertno Research Center, he leads X-PEN ID, a persistent digital identity platform for global contributors; SEIPID, scholarly persistent identifiers; and the Xpertno International Journal of Interdisciplinary Research.
His PhD research examines the pragmatic choices undergraduates across borders make between language mixing and linguistic purity, a lens that extends naturally into his work building scholarly infrastructure. He has taught linguistics, pragmatics, and communication at the university level and has designed and delivered specialization programs in scholarly publishing, leadership, academic writing, and digital and AI literacy to over a thousand learners across more than fifteen countries.
Alongside his academic and publishing work, he serves as Chief Administrative Manager at the Fertilizer Manufacturers of Pakistan Advisory Council, contributing to national-level policy coordination, institutional operations, and industry advocacy. The author of seven books and a growing body of peer-reviewed scholarship, he writes across academic and literary forms. His goal is to build open, persistent, and globally accessible knowledge systems for the next generation of researchers, authors, and educators while remaining, at heart, an educator who believes that knowledge is only as valuable as the hands it eventually reaches.
Foreword/Preface: Every so often, a work of art emerges that speaks to the very core of our shared human experience. Nasir Razzaq's Unspoken Words is such a work, and in this enriched second edition, the reader is invited to traverse even deeper into the realms of emotion and thought. Through his seamless blend of prose and poetry, Razzaq explores the most profound aspects of love, loss, hope, and despair, offering a unique window into the complexities of the human spirit.