AccessMyLibrary : Search Information that Libraries Trust AccessMyLibrary | News, Research, and Information that Libraries Trust

AccessMyLibrary    Browse    J    Journal of International Affairs    After the revolution is before the revolution.

After the revolution is before the revolution.

Publication: Journal of International Affairs

Publication Date: 22-MAR-07

Author: Kunkler, Mirjam
How to access the full article: Free access to all articles is available courtesy of your local library. To access the full article click the "See the full article" button below. You will need your US library barcode or password.

Bookmark this article

Print this article

Link to this article

Email this article

Digg It!

Add to del.icio.us

RSS

COPYRIGHT 2007 Columbia University School of International Public Affairs

Class and Labor in Iran: Did the Revolution Matter? Farhad Nomani and Sohrab Behdad (Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press, 2006), 268 pages.

Of the three principal values which the Iranian Revolution claimed to embody--nationalism, social justice and Islam--it is social justice that has been least actualized in the Islamic Republic (although pious Muslims might argue that this should indeed be said of Islam).

Not few academic studies of the revolution have elucidated how Ayatollah Khomeini and his supporting faction successfully marginalized, and largely eliminated, rival social movements that had been instrumental in the revolution's success--notably the Marxist movement, the women's movement and secular political elites striving for a democratic republic with limited influence of the houzeh (religious seminaries).

Despite the revolution's failure to deliver on the promise of social justice, which originally had been a major cause for revolutionary mobilization, in its rhetoric the Islamic Republic continues to legitimize itself with reference to its social project. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei regularly emphasizes the creation of justice in economic and social relations as a major duty of his reign and not infrequently dots his speeches with phrases such as "today the servant government has focused its attention on rendering assistance to the deprived regions and we owe this to social justice." (1)

Farhad Nomani and Sohrab Behdad evaluate this ideal alongside the facts. In Class and Labor in Iran the authors test the extent to which the revolution has achieved an equalization of the social classes, alleviated poverty and decreased the rural-urban, as well as gender, divide. That Nomani and Behdad query the revolution's effectiveness in these realms is foreshadowed by the book's subtitle: Did the Revolution Matter? The...

Read the full article for free courtesy of your local library.


Find companies classified under Book publishing
Source: After the revolution is before the revolution.

What's on AccessMyLibrary?

33,851,797 articles
in the following categories:

Arts, Business, Consumer News, Culture & Society, Education, Government, Personal Interest, Health, News, Science & Technology


© 2008 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning  | All Rights Reserved | About this Service | About The Gale Group, a part of Cengage Learning
                                            Privacy Policy | Site Map | Content Licensing | Contact Us | Link to us
      Other Gale sites: Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever.com | WiseTo Social Issues