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IRAN

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IRAN Kumail Rizvi, Ryan Miller, John Winkler, Will L Estrange, Senyo Ahedor Judiciary Supreme Court is the highest court of appeal Judges are all high-ranking ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IRAN


1
IRAN
  • Kumail Rizvi, Ryan Miller, John Winkler, Will
    LEstrange, Senyo Ahedor

2
Introduction
  • Iran has lots of civil liberties!!!
  • Democracy is plentiful!!!
  • Political parties rule!!!
  • Anyone can become president or supreme leader!!!

3
Introduction
  • Everything you read in the previous slide was
    false.
  • Lets get down it.

4
Introduction
  • Population 76.923 million
  • Population growth rate 1.253
  • 636,236 sq miles about the size of AK
  • Literacy rate 79 total (men 86, women 73)

5
Background
6
Introduction
  • Ethnic groups Persians 51, Azeri 24, Gilaki
    and Mazandarani 8, Kurd 7, Arab 3, Lur 2,
    Baloch 2, Turkmen 2, other 1.
  • Religions Shi'a Muslim 89 Sunni Muslim 9
    Zoroastrian, Jewish, Christian, and Baha'i 2.
  • Languages Persian 58, Turkic languages 26,
    Kurdish 9, Luri 2, Balochi 1, Arabic 1,
    Turkish 1, other 2.

7
Background
  • Until 1935, Iran was known as Persia
  • In 1979, Shah was overthrown.
  • Religious leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
    establishes himself as Supreme Leader of the new,
    theocratic republic guided by Islamic principles.

8
Background
  • Khomeini died in 1989.
  • The Assembly of Experts chose the outgoing
    president of the republic Ali Khamenei to
    succeed him as Supreme Leader.

9
Political Institutions Levels of Government
  • Islamic Republic Theocracy
  • Unitary

10
Political Institutions - Executive
  • Dual Executive
  • Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei
  • Appointed for life by Assembly of Experts
  • President Mahmud Ahmadi-Nejad
  • Elected by popular vote for a four-year term
    (eligible for a second term and third
    nonconsecutive term)
  • Cabinet - Council of Ministers selected by the
    president with legislative approval

11
Political Institutions - Executive
  • Powers of Supreme Leader
  • Mediates among institutions
  • Can dismiss the president
  • Can eliminate presidential candidates
  • Commander of military
  • Can nominate/remove judges
  • Powers of President
  • Selects the Cabinet
  • Appoints most senior officials
  • Draws up annual budget
  • Can propose legislation to the Majles
  • Conducts foreign policy

12
Ayatollah Khamenei and President Ahmadinejad
13
Political Institutions Executive- Three
Oversight Bodies
  • Assembly of Religious Experts
  • 86 members general election every 4 years
  • Determines the succession of the Supreme Leader
  • Reviewing his performance
  • Expelling the Supreme Leader if necessary

14
Assembly of Religious Experts
15
Executive -Three Oversight Bodies
  • Expediency Council
  • 32 members, chosen by Supreme Leader, meet in
    secret
  • Exerts supervisory authority over the executive,
    judicial, and legislative branches
  • Resolves legislative issues on which the Majles
    and the Council of Guardians disagree
  • Has been used to advise national religious
    leaders on matters of national policy

16
Executive - Three Oversight Bodies
  • Council of Guardians
  • 12 members, 6 appointed by SL, 6 nominated by
    Chief Judge and approved by Majles
  • Determines whether proposed legislation is both
    constitutional and faithful to Islamic law
  • Checks candidates in popular election for
    suitability
  • Supervises national elections

17
(No Transcript)
18
Political Institutions - Legislative
  • Unicameral - Islamic Consultative Assembly aka
    Majles
  • 290 seats representation won through single
    member districts
  • Direct election every 4 years
  • Powers of Majles
  • Enact and change ordinary laws
  • Can introduce legislation
  • Choose 6/12 members of Guardian Council
  • Investigate state affairs
  • Approval of budget, treaties, cabinet ministers

19
Majles
    Conservatives (195)     Reformists
(51)     Independents (39)     Religious
minorities (5)
20
Political Institutions - Elections
  • General elections are held for
  • The President every 4 years
  • The Majles every 4 years
  • The Assembly of Religious Leaders every 6 years
  • City and Village Council Elections every 4
    years
  • Competitiveness
  • All candidates must be approved by Guardian
    Council
  • Universal voting at 18 years of age

21
Political Institutions Electoral Systems
  • Elections for the Majles and the Presidency are
    done in winner-take-all, plurality elections
  • No proportional representation is used
  • Elections are done in two rounds

22
EXPLOSION
23
Political Parties
  • Right to form given in the constitution
  • Banned until Muhammad Khatamis election as
    president (1997)
  • Divided into two main coalitions
  • Conservative
  • Reformist

24
Political Parties
  • Conservative Alliance
  • Islamic Society of Engineers
  • Islamic Coalition Party
  • Banned Reformist
  • Islamic Iran Participation Front
  • National Confidence Party
  • Freedom Movement Party
  • The Alliance of Builders of Islamic Iran
    Reformist Coalition
  • Executives of Construction Party
  • National Trust Party
  • The Iranian Reform Movement

25
Interest Groups
  • Line between interest groups and political
    parties difficult to determine.
  • Groups at work include
  • Islamic Association
  • Women and Green Coalitions
  • National Front
  • Liberation Movement
  • The Mojahedin
  • Workers House

26
Bureaucracy
  • Provides jobs for college and high school
    graduates
  • Dominated by the clergy
  • Senior ministries are headed by clerics
  • Not based on merit
  • Culture and Islamic Guidance
  • Censures the media

27
Bureaucracy
  • Intelligence- serves as the chief security
    organization
  • Heavy Industry- manages nationalized factories
  • Reconstruction- expands social services and sees
    that Islam extends into the countryside

28
Military
  • The Leader is Commander in Chief
  • He appoints Chief of Staff as well as top
    commanders
  • Revolutionary Guards- elite military force
  • Created as a parallel force with its own budgets,
    weapons, and uniforms
  • Large number of former Guards sit in the Majles

29
Military
30
Regular Military (National Military)
  • 370,000
  • 220,000 conscripts
  • Its purpose is to defend the borders

31
Irregular Forces
  • Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
  • 120,000 Revolutionary Guards (1979)
  • 200,000 volunteers of the Mobilization of the
    Oppressed (Basej-e Mostazafin)
  • Protect the republic from internal enemies

32
Revolutionary Guard
33
Judiciary
  • Headed by a chief justice
  • Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani
  • Must be a cleric
  • Appointed by the Supreme Leader
  • 5 year term
  • Manages the judiciary and oversees the
    appointment and removal of judges

34
Judiciary
  • Supreme Court is the highest court of appeal
  • Judges are all high-ranking clerics
  • Two types of law
  • Sharia and Qanun

35
Sharia
  • Foundation of all Islamic civilization
  • Incorporates ideas of many legal scholars
  • Meant to embody a vision of a community where all
    Muslims share the same moral values
  • Its interpretation is the most important of all
    responsibilities for political and religious
    leaders

36
Qanun
  • No sacred basis
  • Passed by the Majles
  • Law made by the peoples elected representatives
  • Must not contradict Sharia

37
Judiciary
  • Ultimate legal authority rests in Sharia law.
  • Leaders of the Iranian Revolution realized that a
    centralized judicial system was needed to tend to
    matters of justice in an orderly fashion.
  • Interpretation of Sharia has broadened gradually.

38
EXPLOSION
39
Political Socialization
  • Family main source
  • Islamic ideals highly influential in political
    upbringing
  • Schools teach students not to question government
  • State-run media attempts to control attitudes
    toward regime

40
Political Cleavages
  • Class- lower class support regime middle and
    upper class are more secular
  • Religion- tensions between Shia and Sunni
    Muslims, Sunni rights not mentioned in
    constitution, variation of Islam called Bahai
    has been persecuted
  • Ethnicity- government worries about Azeris
    forming their own state
  • Reformers vs. conservatives- theocracy vs.
    democracy debate between clerics and reformers

41
Media
  • State-run media
  • Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting
  • Government prohibits citizens from watching
    international stations
  • Muhammad Khatami (1997-2005) loosened
    restrictions on media but Mahmoud Ahmandinejad
    has closed down newspapers, banned books and
    websites
  • Many Newspapers and magazines are privately
    owned.

42
Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting
The freedom of expression and dissemination of
thoughts in the Radio and Television of the
Islamic Republic of Iran must be guaranteed in
keeping with the Islamic criteria and the best
interests of the country Article 175 of Iranian
Constitution
President can appoint and dismiss of the head of
the Radio and Television of the Islamic Republic
of Iran
43
Political Participation
  • Freedom of speech and press included in 1979
    Constitution but they have been ignored
  • 85 of electorate voted in 2009 election
  • Peaceful protests and demonstrations not
    tolerated under Ahmadinejad
  • 1999 university protests across Iran after
    government shut down of reformist newspaper
  • 2002 court-ruled death sentence for academic
    reformer
  • Massive protests in 2003 after government
    privatization of university system

44
2009 Election
  • Election results showed Ahmadinejad had won 63
    against 34 for Hossein Mousavi, leading to
    demonstrations in the streets
  • Government sent thousands of Revolutionary Guards
    called Basij to quell the crowds

45
2009 Election Cartoons
46
2009 Election Protests
47
Women
  • Westerners consider veil to be oppressive more
    objection might be from west than Iranian women
    themselves
  • Women have better access to education in Iran
    than many other Islamic countries, more than half
    of college graduates are women, making up 33 of
    labor force
  • Women poorly represented in Iranian Parliament, 8
    out of 290 representatives women, all
    conservative

48
Women
  • Islamic Republic policy toward women called
    equality-with-difference
  • Divorce and custody laws favor men
  • Women must wear scarves and long coats in public
  • Women cannot leave the country without consent of
    male relatives
  • Stoning of women for adultery

49
EXPLOSION
50
Political Economic Change Timeline
  • 1941 Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlavi takes thrown
    after father abdicates
  • 1950s Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadeq
    nationalizes the British-owned oil industry
  • 1960s 70s White Revolution by Shah to
    modernize and westernize
  • 1979 Revolution and overthrow of the shah and
    draft of new constitution

51
Political Economic Change Timeline
  • 1980-88 Iraq invasion of Iran over land disputes
  • 1989 Death of Ayatollah Khomeini, appointment of
    Ayatollah Khamenei and revision of the
    Constitution
  • 1997 Election of moderate cleric Muhammad
    Khatami
  • 2005 Election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

52
Democratization
  • Full democratization inhibited by stronger
    theocratic and authoritarian principles along
    with fundamentalist Islamic beliefs.
  • Constitution of 1979 replaced that of 1906
  • It created a mix of authoritarian, theocratic and
    democratic principles. The merger of these three
    governing types created highly contradictory
    document.

53
Theocracy and Democracy
54
Democratic Principles
  • Outlined in Chapter Three of Constitution
  • Article 23 Freedom of Beliefs
  • Article 24 Freedom of Press
  • Article 27 Freedom of Assembly
  • Article 29 Welfare benefits

55
Globalization
  • Oil revenues in the late seventies-early eighties
    helped to pay for 90 of Irans imports and 80
    of their budget, making the economically
    dependent on the demand of oil from more
    industrialized countries in 1970s.
  • Under the shah, Iran functioned with OPEC to keep
    oil prices moderate in order to satisfy western
    countries, but after the revolution, Iran turned
    away from the west, discouraging foreign
    investments.

56
EXPLOSION
57
Public Policymaking
  • Irans ruling clergy after the revolution could
    be classified as ideologically elite.
  • Pragmatists and technocrats have become more
    influential.
  • Relevant policy deals with population, the
    environment, social welfare, refugees, and human
    rights.

58
Supranational Influences
  • United Nations (UN)
  • International Monetary Fund (IMF)
  • World Bank
  • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
    (OPEC)
  • World Trade Organization (WTO)

59
Nuclear Energy
  • Irans nuclear program goes back many decades,
    and the leaders have maintained that the purpose
    of their nuclear program is for the generation of
    power.

60
EXPLOSION
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