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Farideh Farhi

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Farideh Farhi is an Independent Scholar and Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa.  Her publications include States and Urban-Based Revolutions in Iran and Nicaragua, as well as numerous articles and book chapters on comparative analysis of revolutions and Iranian politics.

The Latest from Farideh Farhi

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The Revolutionary Legacy: A Contested and Insecure Polity
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Revolutionary Legacy: A Contested and Insecure Polity

    Islamic Iran will enter its 30th year with almost as much political noise as it generated at its inception. On the one hand, Iran’s nuclear program and the confrontation it has engendered are daily reminders of the regional and global dimensions of Iran’s revolution. On the other hand, the incessant squabbling among various branches of the government as well as among different political factions point to the fact that, more than anything else, the revolution was about an end to a one-man dominated political system.

    January 29, 2009

    Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections Part 1
  • Analysis
  • Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections Part 1

    Originally posted March 2008

    One of the strangest features of contemporary Iranian politics must surely be the reality that despite the concerted and successful effort to narrow the range of candidates allowed to run for various political offices, competition among individuals and groups has not only remained unabated, it has intensified. The elite jockeying that has taken place in the past few months, leading to the upcoming March 14 Majlis elections, is a good example of the competitive intensity that had come to characterize Iranian politics.

    March 2, 2008

    Introducation to Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections
  • Analysis
  • Introducation to Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections

    Speaking of the need for an opposition party, Kemal Ataturk once said: “I do not want to be recorded in history as the man who bequeathed a tyranny.” These words could also be uttered by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah ‘Ali Khamene’i. Yet, the legacy that ‘Ali Khamene’i will leave behind can perhaps best be described as a promenade of contradictory truths. Such contradictions are emblematic of the 8th round of Iranian parliamentary (Majlis) elections that are now upon us. It is true that the Iranian state employs a prodigious style of electoral engineering to regiment outcomes.

    March 1, 2008