at
LUMS in 2014 He worked for a year with
Burmah Shell Oil, and in 1957, joined the Pakistani foreign service. In 1960, he was posted as a Third Secretary in the
Pakistani High Commission in London, and was promoted to Second Secretary in the Tunis embassy from 1962 to 1966. In 1976, Shahryar Khan became Pakistan's ambassador to
Jordan (1976–1982) and the United Kingdom (1987–1990). He also stayed as Pakistan's Ambassador to France (1999–2001) and chairman, Committee on Foreign Service Reforms, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1997–1999). Khan was teaching Pakistan's Foreign Relations at the
Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) as part of the
Social Sciences faculty. He taught a course titled "Pakistan's Foreign Relations" in the Fall semester and a senior-level course titled "Critical Issues in Pakistan's Foreign Relations" in the Spring semester. At LUMS, he was also the patron of the LUMS Model UN Society (LUMUN). On 1 July 1994, he was appointed
United Nations Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali's Special Representative to
Rwanda, succeeding
Jacques-Roger Booh-Booh. As U.N. Special Representative, he represented the United Nations during
the genocide and subsequent
refugee crisis. In his retirement, Shahryar Khan wrote a number of books.
The Begums of Bhopal is a history of the princely state of Bhopal.
The Shallow Graves of Rwanda is an eye-witness account of his two-year stay in a country ravaged by genocide.
Cricket – a Bridge of Peace, about India-Pakistan relations, is his third book. His most personal book was the biography of his mother Princess Abida Sultaan –
Memoirs of a Rebel Princess, which has been translated into Urdu. In 2013, with his son Ali Khan, he wrote
Cricket Cauldron: The Turbulent Politics of Sport in Pakistan. He also co-authored
Shadows Across the Playing Field: 60 Years of India-Pakistan Cricket (2009) with Indian writer and politician
Shashi Tharoor. ==Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board==