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El. knyga: Civil Society and Democracy in Iran

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In this timely, informative edited volume, major Iranian scholars and civic actors address some of the most pressing questions about Iranian civil society and the process of democratization in Iran. They describe the role of Iranian civil society in the process of transition to democracy in Iran and offer insight about the enduring legacy of previous social and political movementsstarting with the Constitutional Revolution of 1906 in the struggle for democracy in Iran. Each contributor looks at different aspects of Iranian civil society to address the complex nature of the political order in Iran and the possibilities for secularization and democratization of the Iranian government. Various contributors analyze the impact of religion on prevailing democratic thought, discussing reformist religious movements and thinkers and the demands of religious minorities. Others provide insight into the democratic implications of recent Iranian womens rights movements, call for secularism within government, and the pressure placed on the existing theocracy by the working class. The contributors address these and related issues in all their richness and complexity and offer a set of discussions that is both accessible and illuminating for the reader.

Recenzijos

Ramin Jahanbegloo has collected an outstanding group of specialists to produce Democracy and Civil Society in Iran. This work will be of greatest interest not only to those concerned with the current state of the civil society problem internationally, but to all who have been watching the Iranian crisis and the Green movement. The analyses offered here have a better chance of helping to comprehend where Iranian politics may be headed than any other available study. A remarkable piece of collective work. -- Andrew Arato, The New School for Social Research This is a timely collection of essays that look beyond recent events to engage with the perennial problems of Iranians quest for constitutional governance and a more humane society. -- Houchang Chehabi, Boston University Inspiring. By bringing out the richness of Iranian civil society traditions, Jahanbegloos volume sustains the hope that a tolerant, pluralistic and liberal society may yet eventually emerge out of the current repressive situation in the country. -- Shlomo Avineri, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Acknowledgements vii
Introduction ix
Ramin Jahanbegloo
Part I Theorizing Civil Society in Iran
1 Civil Society in Iran: The Story of a Century-Long Struggle
3(22)
Peyman Vahabzadeh
2 Theorizing Civil Society in Contemporary Iran
25(14)
Farzin Vahdat
3 The Green Movement in Iran: Democratization and Secularization from Below
39(40)
Farhad Khosrokhavar
4 The Civil Society Approach to Democratization in Iran: The Case for Bringing it Back in, Carefully
79(18)
Mojtaba Mahdavi
Part II Islam, Secularism, and Efforts for Democratization
5 Religious Disputation and Democratic Constitutionalism: The Enduring Legacy of the Constitutional Revolution on the Struggle for Democracy in Iran
97(16)
Nader Hashemi
6 Religious Life in a Secular State
113(6)
Yousefi Eshkevari
7 Humble Secularism
119(8)
Mehrzad Boroujerdi
8 What is our Problem?
127(32)
Akbar Ganji
Part III Gender and Politics
9 Green Women of Iran
159(12)
Victoria Tahmasebi
10 A Feminist Agenda for the Iranian Constitution: Gender at the Intersection of Disputed Identities
171(18)
Amin Reza Koohestani
11 The Other Side of the Quest for Democracy in Iran
189(10)
Haideh Moghissi
12 Women and the Women's Movement in Post-Elections: Double Females?
199(20)
Shadi Sadr
Part IV Identity and Group Rights
13 The Baha'i Community, Human Rights, and the Construction of a New Iranian Identity
219(14)
Payam Akhavan
14 Democracy, Civil Society, and the Iranian Working Class: The Struggle for Independent Labor Organizations
233(34)
Farhad Nomani
Sohrab Behdad
15 Labour Organizing in Iran: Lessons of the 1979 Revolution
267(14)
Saeed Rahnema
16 A Confident Generation
281(10)
Omid Memarian
Index 291(6)
About the Editor and Contributors 297
Ramin Jahanbegloo is professor of political science at the University of Toronto.